
In the Incubator Virtual Telephone Visits at County Medical Center
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By: Mary Matthews
Community Writer
Photo Courtesy of:
CCI
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Patients who have medical-related questions, or are inquiring about adjustments in their treatments, may now schedule virtual telephone appointments at Riverside County Regional Medical Center.
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Should patients come into the clinic for every question or adjustment in their treatment? By integrating virtual telephone visits into the care process, Riverside County Heath System is seeking to lower costs, increase patient access, reduce hospital readmission rates, and improve patient satisfaction.
For populations served by safety net providers, clinic visits can mean difficulties finding transportation and costly sacrifices of time off from work. For providers, trying to see every patient that needs care in a given day is at best overwhelming and at worst impossible—especially in the safety net. By searching for less disruptive ways to tackle certain kinds of routine care and communication, we can ease the workload on providers and reduce inconvenience for patients.
Particularly in underserved communities, the expenses of transportation, arranging childcare, and taking time off work all make trips to the doctor costly and inconvenient. Patients who are unable to access primary care in a timely manner are more likely to visit the emergency room and experience poor outcomes. Patients need to have an ongoing conversation with their provider about care, treatment and prevention, but the inconveniences of face-to-face visits make this a struggle for both parties.
Virtual telephone visits can be appropriate for addressing a wide variety of clinical issues and follow-up care, including discussion of abnormal test results, medication management, care coordination or referrals, management of chronic conditions, management of acute conditions (cough/cold symptoms, simple urinary tract infection, etc.), post-hospital or post-emergency follow-up, preventive care, health education, outreach, and supportive counseling. Providers should only conduct telephone visits with established patients, or new patients who are on a long waiting list for an appointment.
How it Works
Clinicians often make telephone calls to their patients at the beginning or end of the clinic day or squeezed in between scheduled in-person clinic visits. This innovation proposes to incorporate virtual telephone visits into the regular clinic schedule, thereby creating a greater incentive to utilize telephone visits when appropriate.
Virtual telephone visits require the same level of pre-visit preparation as in-person clinic visits: charts should be prepared and reviewed; patients should receive reminder calls the day before.
From their early trials, Riverside County Health System found that while each virtual telephone visit will vary in length depending upon the nature of the discussion, a good overall goal is to complete approximately six virtual telephone visits per hour.
At Riverside, the Innovation Team that developed virtual telephone visits is spreading the program to additional clinics and fostering culture changes by training family medicine residents using a new requirement incorporating non-face-to-face visits into curriculum and training. The success of telephone visits program will be measured by the total number of patient encounters, reduction in appointment backlog, patient satisfaction, and clinician and staff engagement. Longer-term measures of success could examine the impact of virtual telephone visits on clinical quality indicators, such as diabetes measures. The greatest challenge is developing a financially sustainable model for virtual telephone visits.