A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Factors Associated with Appointment Completion and Visit Modality during Virtual Urology Visits

Urol Pract. 2021 Nov;8(6):661-667. doi: 10.1097/UPJ.0000000000000263. Epub 2021 Aug 24.

Abstract

Introduction: The necessary transition to telehealth during COVID-19 generated new challenges for providers and patients, with the opportunity to exacerbate or mitigate standing care inequities. To better understand virtual medicine care delivery in urology, we sought to identify factors associated with appointment completion and use of telephone or video visits.

Methods: We performed a retrospective, single-institutional cross-sectional analysis of all remote patient appointments from March 17, 2020-August 31, 2020. The primary outcome was appointment completion rate. Patients were determined to have not completed an appointment if they canceled, left before being seen or were a "no show." Secondary analysis evaluated factors associated with scheduling video vs telephone appointment. Various patient and appointment-specific factors were analyzed. Chi-squared tests and univariate logistic regression were used for analysis accordingly.

Results: Of 3,769 appointments, 2,996 (79.5%) were completed while 773 (20.5%) were not, with 1,544 (41.0%) completed over telephone while 2,225 (59.0%) used video. Race, age, income, insurance, location, division and appointment length showed statistical significance (p <0.05) for appointment completion and visit modality. Females were more likely to use video (62.7% vs 58.0%, p=0.01). Patients were more likely to complete afternoon visits (81.1% vs 78.3%, p=0.04), visits with physicians (81.2% vs 75.4%, p <0.01) and phone calls (83.3% vs 76.9%, p <0.01).

Conclusions: Multiple factors were associated with both appointment completion rate and use of telephone or video. These factors may reflect disparities in social determinants of health and select patients may benefit from additional coordination of care to prevent missed appointments and deconstruct inequities.

Keywords: health care delivery; healthcare disparities; human characteristics; telemedicine.