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Challenging assumptions: a tripartite assessment of medical quality, resource utilization, and equity concerns in pediatric telemedicine
by
Sergienko, Ruslan
, Hornik-Lurie, Tzipi
, Haimi, Motti
, Albukrek, Dov
in
Adolescent
/ Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
/ Antibiotic prescriptions
/ Antibiotics
/ At risk populations
/ Child
/ Child, Preschool
/ Cost control
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ Drugs
/ ED visits
/ Emergency department utilization
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency medical services
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Epidemics
/ Ethical aspects
/ Evaluation
/ Female
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health care disparities
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Health Services Accessibility - statistics & numerical data
/ Health services utilization
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Influence
/ Information Systems and Communication Service
/ Israel
/ Male
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Meetings
/ Pandemics
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Patients
/ Pediatric
/ Pediatrics
/ Pediatrics - statistics & numerical data
/ Prescribing
/ Primary care
/ Quality
/ Quality management
/ Quality of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Resource utilization
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Socioeconomics
/ Standard of care
/ Statistics
/ Telemedicine
/ Telemedicine - standards
/ Telemedicine - statistics & numerical data
/ Tyto
/ Utilization
/ Video teleconferencing
2025
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Challenging assumptions: a tripartite assessment of medical quality, resource utilization, and equity concerns in pediatric telemedicine
by
Sergienko, Ruslan
, Hornik-Lurie, Tzipi
, Haimi, Motti
, Albukrek, Dov
in
Adolescent
/ Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
/ Antibiotic prescriptions
/ Antibiotics
/ At risk populations
/ Child
/ Child, Preschool
/ Cost control
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ Drugs
/ ED visits
/ Emergency department utilization
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency medical services
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Epidemics
/ Ethical aspects
/ Evaluation
/ Female
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health care disparities
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Health Services Accessibility - statistics & numerical data
/ Health services utilization
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Influence
/ Information Systems and Communication Service
/ Israel
/ Male
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Meetings
/ Pandemics
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Patients
/ Pediatric
/ Pediatrics
/ Pediatrics - statistics & numerical data
/ Prescribing
/ Primary care
/ Quality
/ Quality management
/ Quality of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Resource utilization
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Socioeconomics
/ Standard of care
/ Statistics
/ Telemedicine
/ Telemedicine - standards
/ Telemedicine - statistics & numerical data
/ Tyto
/ Utilization
/ Video teleconferencing
2025
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Challenging assumptions: a tripartite assessment of medical quality, resource utilization, and equity concerns in pediatric telemedicine
by
Sergienko, Ruslan
, Hornik-Lurie, Tzipi
, Haimi, Motti
, Albukrek, Dov
in
Adolescent
/ Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
/ Antibiotic prescriptions
/ Antibiotics
/ At risk populations
/ Child
/ Child, Preschool
/ Cost control
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ Drugs
/ ED visits
/ Emergency department utilization
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency medical services
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Epidemics
/ Ethical aspects
/ Evaluation
/ Female
/ Health care
/ Health care access
/ Health care disparities
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Health Services Accessibility - statistics & numerical data
/ Health services utilization
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Influence
/ Information Systems and Communication Service
/ Israel
/ Male
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Medical care
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Meetings
/ Pandemics
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Patients
/ Pediatric
/ Pediatrics
/ Pediatrics - statistics & numerical data
/ Prescribing
/ Primary care
/ Quality
/ Quality management
/ Quality of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Resource utilization
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Socioeconomics
/ Standard of care
/ Statistics
/ Telemedicine
/ Telemedicine - standards
/ Telemedicine - statistics & numerical data
/ Tyto
/ Utilization
/ Video teleconferencing
2025
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Challenging assumptions: a tripartite assessment of medical quality, resource utilization, and equity concerns in pediatric telemedicine
Journal Article
Challenging assumptions: a tripartite assessment of medical quality, resource utilization, and equity concerns in pediatric telemedicine
2025
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Overview
Background
Telemedicine has expanded healthcare accessibility, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, evidence regarding its economic efficiency and clinical quality remains inconclusive, with some studies suggesting increased costs, service utilization, and inappropriate antibiotic prescribing compared to traditional care modalities.
Objective
This study evaluated pediatric telemedicine services across three dimensions: clinical outcomes (antibiotic prescribing patterns), resource utilization implications (healthcare utilization and emergency department visits), and equity considerations (sociodemographic distribution of services).
Methods
We conducted a retrospective cohort study analysis of 1,500 children under 19 years within Israel’s Clalit Health Services (Shron-Shomron District) from January 2021 to January 2022. Participants were randomly sampled from three groups based on their telemedicine utilization patterns: in-person primary care physician (PCP) visits only (
n
= 500); PCP plus phone/video telemedicine (
n
= 500); and PCP plus phone/video plus Tyto device telemedicine (
n
= 500). These children were classified as discrete groups, not only as solitary visits. We assessed emergency department (ED) admission rates, antibiotic prescription frequencies for common pediatric conditions, and sociodemographic characteristics across the groups.
Results
Analysis of 21,968 visits revealed striking socioeconomic disparities in telemedicine utilization. While 58.1% of all participants had high socioeconomic status (SES), this increased to 68.6% among Tyto device users. Conversely, low-SES patients comprised 26.4% of in-person-only visits but only 3% of Tyto users. ED admission rates for all groups combined were 4.0%, 1.6% for the “PCP only” group, 5.4% for the “PCP + phone/video” group (12% after phone/video visits), and 3.6% for the “PCP + phone/video + Tyto” group (4.1% after Tyto only). Antibiotic prescribing rates were similarly divergent: mean rates of antibiotic prescriptions after PCP visits were 10.3%, after telephone/video visits were 16.8%, and after Tyto visits were 21.4% (
p
< 0.001). Multivariable analysis confirmed those findings and demonstrated higher ED utilization and antibiotic prescribing among low-SES patients and those in remote locations, independent of visit type.
Conclusions
Our findings challenge prevailing assumptions about telemedicine benefits, revealing unexpected associations between telemedicine services and higher ED utilization and antibiotic prescribing compared to traditional care, particularly among vulnerable populations. These associations may reflect complex interactions between patient characteristics, provider behavior, and care modalities that warrant further investigation. Healthcare systems should reconsider the implementation of telemedicine services to ensure they deliver on promises of expanded access while maintaining quality, appropriate resource utilization, and equitable distribution of benefits across socioeconomic groups.
Clinical trial number
Not applicable.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
/ Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
/ Child
/ COVID-19
/ Drugs
/ Emergency department utilization
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Female
/ Health Services Accessibility - statistics & numerical data
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Information Systems and Communication Service
/ Israel
/ Male
/ Management of Computing and Information Systems
/ Medicine
/ Meetings
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Patients
/ Pediatrics - statistics & numerical data
/ Quality
/ Quality of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Telemedicine - statistics & numerical data
/ Tyto
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