• Acad Emerg Med · Apr 2023

    Standard Nurse Phone Triage vs Tele-Emergency Care Pilot on Veteran Use of In-person Acute Care: An Instrumental Variable Analysis.

    • Kathleen Y Li, Paul S Kim, Joshua Thariath, Edwin S Wong, Jonathan Barkham, and Keith E Kocher.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
    • Acad Emerg Med. 2023 Apr 1; 30 (4): 310320310-320.

    ObjectivesUse of acute care telemedicine is growing, but data on quality, utilization, and cost are limited. We evaluated a Veterans Affairs (VA) tele-emergency care (tele-EC) pilot aimed at reducing reliance on out-of-network (OON) emergency department (ED) care, a growing portion of VA spending. With this service, an emergency physician virtually evaluated selected Veterans calling a nurse triage line.MethodsCalls to the triage line occurring January-December 2021 and advised to seek care acutely within 24 h were included. We described tele-EC user characteristics, common triage complaints, and patterns in referral to and management by tele-EC. The primary outcome was acute care visits (ED, urgent care, and hospitalizations at VA and OON sites) within 7 days of the index call. Secondary outcomes included mortality, OON acute care spending, and the effect of tele-EC visit modality (phone vs. video). We used both standard regression and instrumental variable (IV) analysis, using the tele-EC physician schedule as the instrument.ResultsOf 7845 eligible calls, 15.5% had a tele-EC visit, with case resolution documented in 57%. Compared to standard nurse triage, tele-EC users were less likely to be Black, had more prior ED visits, and were triaged as higher acuity. Calls concerning dizziness/syncope, blood in stool, and chest pain were most likely to have a tele-EC visit. Tele-EC was associated with fewer ED visits than standard nurse triage in both regression (average marginal effect [AME] -16.8%, 95% confidence interval [CI] -19.2 to -14.4) and IV analyses (AME -17.5%, 95% CI -25.1 to -9.8), lower hospitalization rate (AME -3.1%, 95% CI -6.2 to -0.0), and lower OON spending (AME -$248, 95% CI -$458 to -$38).ConclusionsAmong Veterans initially advised to seek care within 24 h, use of tele-EC compared to standard phone triage led to decreased ED visits, hospitalizations, and OON spending within 7 days.© 2023 The Authors. Academic Emergency Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

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