South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

When an in-person doctor’s visit counts

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When the COVID19 pandemic swept the country in early 2020 and emptied doctors’ offices nationwide, telemedici­ne was suddenly thrust into the spotlight. Patients and their physicians turned to virtual visits by video or phone rather than risk meeting face-to-face.

During the early months of the pandemic, telehealth visits for care exploded.

“It was a dramatic shift in one or two weeks that we would expect to happen in a decade,” said Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, a professor at Harvard Medical School whose research focuses on telemedici­ne and other health care delivery innovation­s. “It’s great that we served patients, but we did not accumulate the norms and (research) papers that we would normally accumulate so that we can know what works and what doesn’t work.”

Now, three years after the start of the pandemic, we’re still figuring that out. Although telehealth use has moderated, it has found a role in many practices, and it is popular with patients.

More than any other field, behavioral health has embraced telehealth. Mental health conditions accounted for just under two-thirds of telehealth claims in November 2022, according to FairHealth, a nonprofit that manages a database of insurance claims.

Telehealth appeals to a patients because it allows them to simply log on to their computer and avoid the time and expense of driving, parking and arranging child care that an in-person visit may require.

But how do you gauge when to opt for telehealth visit versus seeing your doctor in person? There are no hard and fast rules, but here’s tips about when it may make more sense to choose one or the other.

If it’s your first visit

“As a patient, you’re trying to evaluate the physician, to see if you can talk to them and trust them,” said Dr. Russell Kohl, a family physician and board member of the American Academy of Family Physicians. “It’s hard to do that on a telemedici­ne visit.”

Maybe your insurance has changed and you need a new primary care doctor or OB-GYN. Or perhaps you have a chronic condition and your doctor has suggested a specialist. A face-to-face visit can help you feel confident with their participat­ion.

An in-person first visit can help doctors evaluate their patients in nontangibl­e ways, too. After a cancer diagnosis, for example, an oncologist might want to examine the site of a biopsy. But just as important, he might want to assess a patient’s emotional state.

“A diagnosis of cancer is an emotional event; it’s a life-changing moment, and a doctor wants to respond to that,” said Dr. Arif Kamal, an oncologist and the chief patient officer at the American Cancer Society. “There are things you can miss unless you’re sitting a foot or two away from the person.”

Once it’s clearer how the patient is responding to treatment, that’s a good time to discuss incorporat­ing telemedici­ne visits.

If a physical exam seems necessary

This may seem like a no-brainer, but there are nuances. Increasing­ly, monitoring equipment that people can keep at home — a blood pressure cuff, a digital glucometer, a pulse oximeter to measure blood oxygen, or a Doppler monitor that checks a fetus’s heartbeat — may give doctors the informatio­n they need, reducing inperson visits required.

Someone’s overall physical health may help tip the scales on whether an in-person exam is needed. A 25-year-old in good health is usually a better candidate for telehealth than a 75-year-old with chronic conditions.

But some complaints typically require an in-person examinatio­n, doctors said, such as abdominal pain, severe musculoske­letal pain or problems related to the eyes and ears.

Abdominal pain could signal trouble with the gallbladde­r, liver or appendix, for example.

“We wouldn’t know how to evaluate it without an exam,” said Dr. Ryan Mire, an internist who is president of the American College of Physicians.

In obstetrics, the pandemic accelerate­d a gradual shift to fewer in-person prenatal visits. Typically, pregnancy involves 14 in-person visits. Some models now recommend eight or fewer, said Dr. Nathaniel DeNicola, chair of telehealth for the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts. A study found no significan­t difference­s in rates of cesarean deliveries, preterm birth, birth weight or admissions to the neonatal intensive care unit between women who received up to a dozen prenatal visits in person and those who received a mix of in-person and virtual visits.

Contracept­ion is another area where less may be more, DeNicola said. Patients can discuss options virtually and may need to schedule a visit only if they want an IUD inserted.

If something is new or changes

When a new symptom crops up, patients should generally schedule an in-person visit. Even if the patient has a chronic condition like diabetes or heart disease that is under control and managed by a physician, sometimes things change. That usually calls for a face-to-face meeting.

“I tell my patients, ‘If it’s new symptoms or a worsening of existing symptoms, that probably warrants an in-person visit,’ ” said Dr. David Cho, a cardiologi­st who chairs the American College of Cardiology’s Health Care Innovation Council. Changes could include chest pain, losing consciousn­ess, shortness of breath or swollen legs.

When patients are sitting in the exam room, Cho can listen to their hearts and lungs and do an EKG if someone has chest pain or palpitatio­ns. He’ll check their blood pressure, examine their feet to see if they’re retaining fluid and look at their neck veins to see if they are bulging.

But all that may not be necessary for a patient with heart failure, for example, whose condition is stable, he said. They can check their own weight and blood pressure at home, and a periodic video visit to check in may suffice.

Video check-ins are effective for many people whose chronic conditions are under control, experts said.

One recommenda­tion holds for almost all situations: Even if a physician suggests a virtual visit, you don’t have to agree to it.

“As a consumer, you should do what you feel comfortabl­e doing,” said

Dr. Joe Kvedar, a professor at Harvard Medical School and past board chairman of the American Telemedici­ne Associatio­n. “And if you really want to be seen in the office, you should make that case.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? During the height of the pandemic, telehealth visits for health care shot up.
DREAMSTIME During the height of the pandemic, telehealth visits for health care shot up.

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