Arab Times

The telemedici­ne’s challenge: Getting patients to click app

Embracing virtual care slow

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WBy Tom Murphy

almart workers can now see a doctor for only $4. The catch? It has to be a virtual visit.

The retail giant recently rolled back the $40 price on telemedici­ne, becoming the latest big company to nudge employees toward a hightech way to get diagnosed and treated remotely.

But patients have been slow to embrace virtual care. Eighty percent of mid-size and large US companies offered telemedici­ne services to their workers last year, up from 18 percent in 2014, according to the consultant Mercer. Only 8 percent of eligible employees used telemedici­ne at least once in 2017, most recent figures show.

“There’s an awful lot of effort right now focused on educating the consumer that there’s a better way,” said Jason Gorevic, CEO of telemedici­ne provider Teladoc Health.

Widespread smartphone use, looser regulation­s and employer enthusiasm are helping to expand access to telemedici­ne, where patients interact with doctors and nurses from afar, often through a secure video connection. Supporters say virtual visits make it easier for patients to see a therapist or quickly find help for ailments that aren’t emergencie­s. But many still fall back to going to the doctor’s office when they’re sick.

Behavior

Health care experts have long said that changing behavior can be hard. In telemedici­ne’s case, patients might learn about it from their employer and then forget about it by the time they need care a few months later. Plus emotions can complicate health care decisions, said Mercer’s Beth Umland.

“My little kid is sick, I want them to have the best of care right away, and for some people that might not register as a telemedici­ne call,” she said. Some patients, especially older ones, also just prefer an in-person visit.

“Going to the doctor’s office is a big event in their life and something they look forward to,” said Geoffrey Boyce, CEO of InSight Telepsychi­atry, which provides virtual mental health services.

Tom Hill is among that crowd. The 66-year-old from Mooresvill­e, Indiana, said he’s never used telemedici­ne and has no plans to.

“I believe in a handshake and looking a guy in the eye,” said Hill during a recent shopping break at a downtown Indianapol­is mall. “I don’t buy anything online either.”

But the practice does gain fans once patients try it.

Julie Guerrero-Goetsch has opened her MDLive telemedici­ne app several times since first using it about a year ago to get help for a sinus infection.

Skeptical

The Fallon, Nevada, resident was skeptical, but she didn’t have time to go in person. MDLive connected her to a doctor soon after she opened the app. She said he started asking questions about symptoms “just as if I was sitting in a doctor’s office” and prescribed an antibiotic.

Caitlin Powers tried telemedici­ne recently after hearing about it through a friend. The Columbia University graduate student was feeling stuffed up and worried she might be coming down with the flu. She said her appointmen­t started on time, lasted 10 minutes, and she spoke by video with a doctor in Florida while never leaving her Brooklyn apartment.

“As a student, I don’t really have time to spend three hours waiting to see a doctor, and this was so easy,” she said.

Doctors have used telemedici­ne for years to monitor patients or reach those in remote locations. Now more employers are encouragin­g people covered under their health plans to seek care virtually for several reasons.

Telemedici­ne can reduce time spent away from the job, and it also can cost half the price of a doctor’s visit, which might top $100 for someone with a high-deductible plan. However, those savings can be negated if telemedici­ne’s convenienc­e causes people to overuse it. (AP)

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