Specialist Perspectives on Delivering High-Quality Telemedicine for Diabetes: A Mixed Methods Survey Study

Author:

Zupa Margaret F1ORCID,Alexopoulos Anastasia-Stefania23ORCID,Esteve Lucy2ORCID,Rosland Ann-Marie45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

2. Duke University School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Nutrition , Durham, NC , USA

3. Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation, Durham Veterans Affairs Health Care System , Durham, NC , USA

4. University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

5. VA Pittsburgh Center for Health Equity and Research Promotion , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Recent recommendations guiding appropriate use of telemedicine for endocrinology care have largely relied on expert opinion due to limited evidence on factors that increase quality of telemedicine care. In this study, we assessed the perspectives of front-line specialists on factors and strategies perceived to increase quality of diabetes care delivered via telemedicine after more than 2 years of widespread use. Methods Adult diabetes specialists in 2 academic health systems who recently used video-based telemedicine to provide diabetes care were invited to participate in an online survey study between March and April 2022. Likert-style questions, followed by related open-ended questions, assessed perspectives on availability of key resources, factors affecting quality, and anticipated benefits from telemedicine for diabetes. Results Response rate was 52% (56/111). More than half (54%) of participants reported better overall quality of diabetes care with face-to-face care vs telemedicine. Participants reported clinical data supporting high-quality care, such as home blood glucose readings and vital signs, were often not available with telemedicine. Patient factors, including comorbidities and communication barriers, reduced anticipated benefit from telemedicine, while geographic and mobility barriers increased expected benefit. Providers described multiple health care setting resources that could promote high-quality telemedicine diabetes care, including greater support for sharing patient-generated health data and coordinating multidisciplinary care. Conclusions After 2 years of sustained use, diabetes specialists identified telemedicine as an important way to enhance access to care. However, specialists identified additional supports needed to increase appropriate use and delivery of high-quality telemedicine care for patients with complex clinical needs.

Funder

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Fraternal Order of Eagles

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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