Abstract
Background
In 2020, at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States experienced surges in healthcare needs, which challenged capacity throughout the healthcare system. Stay-at-home orders in many jurisdictions, cancellation of elective procedures, and closures of outpatient medical offices disrupted patient access to care. To inform symptomatic persons about when to seek care and potentially help alleviate the burden on the healthcare system, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and partners developed the CDC Coronavirus Self-Checker (“Self-Checker”). This interactive tool assists individuals seeking information about COVID-19 to determine the appropriate level of care by asking demographic, clinical, and nonclinical questions during an online “conversation.”
Objective
This paper describes user characteristics, trends in use, and recommendations delivered by the Self-Checker between March 23, 2020, and April 19, 2021, for pursuing appropriate levels of medical care depending on the severity of user symptoms.
Methods
User characteristics and trends in completed conversations that resulted in a care message were analyzed. Care messages delivered by the Self-Checker were manually classified into three overarching conversation themes: (1) seek care immediately; (2) take no action, or stay home and self-monitor; and (3) conversation redirected. Trends in 7-day averages of conversations and COVID-19 cases were examined with development and marketing milestones that potentially impacted Self-Checker user engagement.
Results
Among 16,718,667 completed conversations, the Self-Checker delivered recommendations for 69.27% (n=11,580,738) of all conversations to “take no action, or stay home and self-monitor”; 28.8% (n=4,822,138) of conversations to “seek care immediately”; and 1.89% (n=315,791) of conversations were redirected to other resources without providing any care advice. Among 6.8 million conversations initiated for self-reported sick individuals without life-threatening symptoms, 59.21% resulted in a recommendation to “take no action, or stay home and self-monitor.” Nearly all individuals (99.8%) who were not sick were also advised to “take no action, or stay home and self-monitor.”
Conclusions
The majority of Self-Checker conversations resulted in advice to take no action, or stay home and self-monitor. This guidance may have reduced patient volume on the medical system; however, future studies evaluating patients’ satisfaction, intention to follow the care advice received, course of action, and care modality pursued could clarify the impact of the Self-Checker and similar tools during future public health emergencies.
Reference13 articles.
1. BitranHGabarraJDelivering information and eliminating bottlenecks with CDC's COVID-19 assessment botOfficial Microsoft Blog202003202021-11-19https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2020/03/20/delivering-information-and-eliminating -bottlenecks-with-cdcs-covid-19-assessment-bot/
2. National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Division of Viral Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and PreventionCoronavirus Self-Checker; Symptoms of COVID-19Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)20212022-01-28https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/symptoms-testing/coronavirus-self-checker.html
3. CDC's Flu on Call Simulation: Testing a National Helpline for Use During an Influenza Pandemic
4. McDaidDParkAOnline Health: Untangling the Web201101042022-11-19BUPA Health Pulse 2010https://www.quotidianosanita.it/allegati/allegato 6791038.pdf
5. The quality of diagnosis and triage advice provided by free online symptom checkers and apps in Australia
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献