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Among adults aged 65 years and older, those who only had Medicare were less likely to use telemedicine.
A greater reduction in systolic blood pressure was seen among predominantly low-income Black and Hispanic stroke survivors.
The percentage of telehealth visits was higher for mental health than other clinicians.
Areas of high telehealth use also had more ambulatory care-sensitive hospitalizations.
A 2021 study shows less access to telehealth and worse reported experiences with video visits.
The increase was especially pronounced for Black adults and adults with lower educational attainment.
Those with telehealth follow-up had more repeat emergency department visits and hospital admissions than those having in-person follow-up.
Small delayed benefit seen for loneliness, but larger improvements seen in perceived stress
An increase in telemedicine use seen with age; use was higher for women than men and for non-Hispanic white and AI/AN adults.
Variance was seen by specialty, with lower concordance for primary care.