Telehealth May 2021 Quarterly Report
System Telehealth Visits
Telehealth Type - All
2020 2021
Phone Video
25,000
11.63%
22,170
22,010
21,017
20,000
15,000
10,000
Visits
6,900
5,000
1,538
1,243
-
88.37%
January
February
March
*Data does not include Northern Light Mayo Hospital
A Modern Day House Call
As a practice, Northern Light Cardiology at Sebasticook Valley Hospital had never considered telehealth as a tool that they would use with patients before 2020. While Michael C Lemieux, MD and his team regularly used telehealth to talk with other specialists about patient care and conditions it wasn’t considered for direct patient care.
“I was very hesitant at first, I really thought we needed to sit with patients every time we saw them to provide personal care, but it turns out that telehealth is more personal in some ways. I am able to spend more time with patients and less time looking at the chart. It’s like you’re visiting their home – you can see the space around them and learn more about who they are. That’s important when you’re caring for a patient because you’re not just caring for that one condition, you’re caring for a person with a complete life.” For Dr. Lemieux, it wasn’t just COVID-19 that made telehealth the right choice, when he tore his achilles earlier this year he had to change his approach to care for his own recovery. “During this time, I’ve discovered that patients really appreciate the option for telehealth, particularly right now.” For many patients getting into the office is challenging, they have to rely on others for rides or live far enough away that the time and expense to travel to the office makes them reluctant to follow up on their care. For these patients, telehealth solves a problem that care teams may not even be aware of. “I’ve started proactively reaching out to patients who haven’t followed up, some of them for a year or more, and they have been open to telehealth. They couldn’t get in, they didn’t have a ride, and they appreciate this option so much.” While there are still times that an in-person visit is needed for diagnoses and treatment, and health emergencies still happen, for many practices and patients telehealth is the key to maintaining high quality care that they’ll keep well into the future.
May 2021 | Vol. 4
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