COVID-19 Accelerates the Use of Telemedicine

PCMag
PC Magazine
Published in
2 min readApr 6, 2020

Virtual house calls are increasingly common because of the pandemic and could be here to stay when it’s over.

By Chandra Steele

Telemedicine has been around for a while but was slow to catch on. COVID-19 has accelerated its prevalence and popularity, as patients and physicians seek to reduce exposure risk.

Sykes, a business processing outsourcing provider, surveyed 2,000 people across the United States from March 19 to March 20 to see how COVID-19 has changed their attitudes and use of telemedicine.

Despite the fact that over half of respondents (51.85%) were aware of services and nearly three-quarters (73.29%) felt they had been adequately informed to use them, less than a quarter (19.5%) had used them.

The pandemic has hastened people availing themselves of at-home doctor visits via video or phone, particularly if they are concerned that they have COVID-19, with 73.2% saying they would use telemedicine to be assessed.

But telemedicine covers all disciplines of medicine and while it cannot substitute completely for in-person videos, both patients and physicians can get a lot out of such visits, particularly if they have a few easy to acquire pieces of technology on hand. PCMag has a guide to what you need to know and might want to have on hand for a visit, which could become much more prevalent now that the pandemic has caused 59.85% to consider the use of telemedicine in the future.

Originally published at https://www.pcmag.com.

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