Advancing Primary Care Access: Exploring the Impact of the Virtual Waiting Room on the Quadruple Aim
Author Department
Medicine
Document Type
Article, Peer-reviewed
Publication Date
6-2024
Abstract
Background: Community health centers grapple with high no-show rates, posing challenges to patient access and primary care provider (PCP) utilization.
Aim: To address these challenges, we implemented a virtual waiting room (VWR) program in April 2023 to enhance patient access and boost PCP utilization.
Setting: Academic community health center in a small urban city in Massachusetts.
Participants: Community health patients (n = 8706) and PCP (n = 14).
Program description: The VWR program, initiated in April 2023, involved nurse triage of same-day visit requests for telehealth appropriateness, then placing patients in a standby pool to fill in as a telehealth visit for no-shows or last-minute cancellations in PCP schedules.
Program evaluation: Post-implementation, clinic utilization rates between July and September improved from 75.2% in 2022 to 81.2% in 2023 (p < 0.01). PCP feedback was universally positive. Patients experienced a mean wait time of 1.9 h, offering a timely and convenient alternative to urgent care or the ER.
Discussion: The VWR is aligned with the quadruple aim of improving patient experience, population health, cost-effectiveness, and PCP satisfaction through improving same-day access and improving PCP schedule utilization. This innovative and reproducible approach in outpatient offices utilizing telehealth holds the potential for enhancing timely access across various medical disciplines.
Keywords: academic community health center; patient access; primary care provider utilization; quadruple aim; virtual waiting room.
Recommended Citation
Runge MS, Meade L, Obaida Z, Mariano VJ, Sumorok N, Churchill E, Aulakh S, Bush B, Canty L, Kidder L, Bourgeault B, Newport K, Parrilla E, Pirraglia PA. Advancing Primary Care Access: Exploring the Impact of the Virtual Waiting Room on the Quadruple Aim. J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Jun 17. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-08857-w. Epub ahead of print.
PMID
38886322