%0 Journal Article %T The relationship between telemedicine tools and physician satisfaction, quality of care, and patient visits during the COVID-19 pandemic. %A Sengupta A %A Sarkar S %A Bhattacherjee A %J Int J Med Inform %V 190 %N 0 %D 2024 Jul 6 %M 38996654 %F 4.73 %R 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2024.105541 %X OBJECTIVE: The objective of our study is to investigate the impacts of telemedicine technology and its specific tools on physicians' overall satisfaction, quality of care, and percentage of patient visits in ambulatory care settings after the COVID-19 lockdowns.
METHODS: Data for our analysis was sourced from the 2021 annual National Electronic Health Records Survey (NEHRS), which included 1,875 complete questionnaire responses from physicians in the 2021 NEHRS. We used regression models to test the effects of telemedicine on physicians' overall satisfaction, quality of care, and percentage of patients' visits.
RESULTS: We report that telemedicine technology has significant positive effects on physicians' satisfaction with telemedicine and quality of care evaluation, both at an aggregate level and at the disaggregate levels of individual telemedicine features, and partially significant effects on patients' telemedicine visits.
CONCLUSIONS: Telemedicine features that contributed significantly to physician satisfaction and quality of care evaluation were telephone, videoconferencing, standalone telemedicine platform, and telemedicine platform integrated with EHR, while only telephone and integrated telemedicine platform contributed significantly to patients' telemedicine visits.
CONCLUSIONS: For telemedicine research and practice, this study confirms that telemedicine improves physician satisfaction and quality of care perceptions and will therefore be preferred by physicians. However, telemedicine has a mixed impact on percentage of patient visits, which suggests that providers may have to work harder to regularize telemedicine acceptance among patients in the post-COVID era.