Analysis of missed clinic visits, preferred languages, and telemedicine in a pediatric gastroenterology practice

Author:

Crume Bonnie1ORCID,Suufi Mohamed2,Nabbosa Gloria1,Parker‐Hartigan Lori1,McBride Ashley1,Rufo Paul A.13,Crowley McGreggor1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition Boston Children's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Massachusetts USA

3. The Sandra L. Fenwick Institute for Pediatric Health Equity and Inclusion Boston Children's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesPrevious studies have demonstrated a relationship between socioeconomic disparities and missed clinic visits (MCV). However, the relationship between patient‐preferred language and MCVs, particularly with respect to telemedicine, remains relatively underexplored. We sought to characterize the associations between MCV and patient‐level predictors, including preferred language, in a large single‐center pediatric gastroenterology, hepatology, and nutrition practice.MethodsThis retrospective longitudinal cohort study included all missed or completed outpatient visits in the Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition Programs at Boston Children's Hospital from January 1, 2016 to May 20, 2022. Univariate and multivariate hierarchical generalized linear mixed models were employed to identify associations between visit‐ and patient‐level predictors and an MCV outcome.ResultsA total of 300,201 visits from 70,710 patients residing in Massachusetts were included. Univariate analyses revealed higher MCV odds for Hispanic patients and those from areas with the highest Social Vulnerability Index (SVI), and these odds increased with telemedicine (Hispanic in‐person odds ratio [OR] 5.21 [(95% confidence interval) 4.93–5.52] vs. telemedicine OR 8.79 [7.85–9.83]; highest SVI in‐person OR 5.28 [4.95–5.64] vs. telemedicine OR 7.82 [6.84–8.96]). Controlled multivariate analyses revealed that among six language groups, only Spanish language preference was associated with higher MCV odds, which increased with telemedicine (Spanish in‐person adjusted OR [aOR] 1.35 [1.24–1.48] vs. telemedicine aOR 2.1 [1.83–2.44]).ConclusionsPatients preferring Spanish experience unique barriers to care beyond those faced by other language preference groups, and telemedicine may exacerbate these barriers.

Publisher

Wiley

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