Changes in Primary Care Visits in the 24 Weeks After COVID-19 Stay-at-Home Orders Relative to the Comparable Time Period in 2019 in Metropolitan Chicago and Northern Illinois Open Access (recommended)
Descriptions
- Resource type(s)
- Article
- Keyword
- pediatric
primary care
utilization
COVID-19
- Rights
- Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States
- Creator
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Macy, Michelle Lea
Huetteman, Patricia
Kan, Kristin
- Abstract
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Objective: In this brief report, we characterize pediatric primary care service utilization in metropolitan Chicago over the first 24 weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic response in relation to the comparable time period in 2019. Methods: We examined retrospective visit and billing data, regardless of payer, from 16 independent pediatric practices that utilize a common electronic medical record platform within an Accountable Care Organization of 252 pediatricians in 71 offices throughout metropolitan Chicago. We categorized visits as Well-Child and Immunization-Only (WC-IO) or Other types and identified visits with a telemedicine billing modifier. Diagnoses for Other visits were tallied and categorized using the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Clinical Classification System. We summarized counts of visits and the proportion of visits with a telemedicine billing modifier in one-week epochs for 2020 compared with 2019. Results: There were 102 942 total visits (72 030 WC-IO; 30 912 Other) in 2020 and 144 672 visits (80 578 WC-IO; 64 094 Other) in 2019. WC-IO visits in 2020 were half of 2019 visits at the start of the Illinois Stay-at-Home Order and returned greater than 90% of 2019 visits in 8 weeks. Other visit types have remained below 70% of 2019 visits. A telemedicine billing modifier peaked in mid-April (21% of all visits) and declined to <10% of all visits in June (Phase 2 reopening). The top 10 most common diagnoses differed between years. Conclusions: Recovery of well child and immunization visits suggests that practice-level efforts and policy change can ensure children receive recommended care as the pandemic evolves.
- Original Bibliographic Citation
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Macy ML, Huetteman P, Kan K. Changes in Primary Care Visits in the 24 Weeks After COVID-19 Stay-at-Home Orders Relative to the Comparable Time Period in 2019 in Metropolitan Chicago and Northern Illinois. Journal of Primary Care and Community Health. 2020;11:7.
- Related URL
- Publisher
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SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
- Date Created
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2020-11
- Original Identifier
- (PMID) 33174495
- Language
- English
- Subject: MESH
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Pediatrics
COVID-19
Utilization Review
Primary Health Care
- Subject: Geographic Name
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Illinois--Chicago
Illinois--Northern
- DOI
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10.1177/2150132720969557
File Details
- File Properties
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Mime type: application/pdf
File size: 264.0 kB