Nine out of 10 Kaiser Permanente members who had a primary-care video visit were confident in the quality of care received, reported that the provider was familiar with their medical history, and felt that their health care needs were adequately addressed.
In a research brief published today in Annals of Internal Medicine, Kaiser Permanente researchers report on a survey of 1,274 patients in Kaiser Permanente’s Northern California region who scheduled video visits during the last quarter of 2015, a few months after the option became available to patients and providers across the region.
“This is unique because while various other consumer telemedicine services offer the opportunity to go online and talk to a doctor, usually that doctor is not the same one that they have been seeing in person, nor does the doctor have full access to their whole medical record.”
“Patients like this channel”
Four out of 5 Kaiser Permanente members asked to participate in the survey shared their views about video visits. Among the study’s findings:
- 92% said the video visit provider was familiar with their medical history.
- 89% were interested in a future video visit.
- 87% said the video visit was more convenient than other ways of getting care.
- 84% said the video visit improved their relationship with their doctor.
Likewise, video visits reduced office visits for 35% of members who would have otherwise needed to make other arrangements for in-person visits, and reduce office visits for 25% of members those who wouldn’t need to make such arrangements.
“For physicians, it’s good for us to have an awareness that patients like this channel, that this is something they appreciate,” said co-author and Kaiser Permanente pediatrician Rahul Parikh, MD, a leader in The Permanente Medical Group (TPMG) Technology Group. “Now we have data to support the value in video visits.”
Use of telemedicine increasing steadily
Kaiser Permanente offers members a comprehensive set of telemedicine options, including phone, secure email message, and video. Although video visits still account for a small proportion of overall patient primary-care visits, the numbers are steadily increasing, Reed said.
“Members seem to be saying, ‘I use FaceTime with my daughter or video-conference at work, so I can do a video visit with my doctor.”
This article originally appeared in Division of Research Spotlight