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WELL Health Technologies Corp T.WELL

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.WELL.DB | WHTCF

WELL Health Technologies Corp. is a practitioner-focused digital healthcare company. The Company develops technologies, services, and support available, which ensures healthcare providers are empowered to positively impact patient outcomes. Its business units include Canadian Patient Services, WELL Health USA Patient Services and SaaS and Technology Services. WELL Health USA Patient and Provider Services includes Primary Circle Medical, Primary WISP, Specialized CRH Medical, and Specialized Provider Staffing. Its healthcare and digital platform includes front and back-office management software applications that help physicians run and secure their practices. Its focused markets include the gastrointestinal market, women's health, primary care and mental health. Its solutions enable 34,000 healthcare providers between the United States and Canada and power owned and operated healthcare’s in Canada with 165 clinics supporting primary care, specialized care and diagnostic services.


TSX:WELL - Post by User

Post by Possibleidiot01on Nov 06, 2023 9:40am
195 Views
Post# 35719105

CBC article on virtual care

CBC article on virtual care

Virtual urgent care didn't divert Ontario patients from ER visits during pandemic, study suggests

Doctors say virtual care can help with staffing crisis in emergency departments

Ambulance paramedics unload a patient.
Paramedics unload a patient at the emergency department of Toronto's St. Michael’s Hospital in January 2022. Virtual urgent care was a way to keep up access to medical care safely during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, but a recent study suggests it didn't divert Ontario patients from ERs. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Virtual urgent care didn't make a dent in diverting patients with less severe health problems from emergency departments during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario, say physicians and researchers.

During the early days of COVID, when physical distancing was strongly encouraged, health care largely shifted to virtual delivery instead of face to face.

In Monday's issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ), Shelley McLeod, a clinical epidemiologist at Sinai Health and associate professor at the University of Toronto, and her team published a study that assessed more than 19,000 virtual urgent care visits across Ontario from December 2020 to September 2021.

The researchers looked at how ill patients were, their later in-person visits to an emergency department and outcomes at a mix of urban, pediatric and northern settings across the province.

Of all those patients in the study, nearly 13 per cent went to emergency in person within three days of a virtual visit, and almost 22 per cent did so within a month of being seen via video call or by phone.

"We found no overall impact of the provincial [virtual urgent care] pilot program on both subsequent emergency department visits and hospital admissions, although an important percentage of [virtual care] patients subsequently attended an emergency department in person," McLeod and her team wrote.

In the study, the mean patient age was 28 years, 60 per cent were female and 85 per cent had a primary care provider.

Justin Hall is one of the study's authors. He's also the deputy chief of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre's emergency department in Toronto, and leads its virtual version, which he says is helpful for those with minor injuries. 

Man standing.
Dr. Justin Hall, deputy chief of Sunnybrook's emergency department, says virtual urgent care is helpful for guiding patients with minor injuries or illnesses. (Turgut Yeter/CBC)

"For patients who might be having severe chest pain, or if they have great difficulties with breathing or sudden changes that might be consistent with a stroke, all of those things would be best handled in our in-person emergency department," or by calling 911, he told CBC News in an interview in response to the study. 

The virtual care service is offered seven days a week from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m., and is led by nurse practitioners and supported by emergency physicians. 

Hall calls it "a great service for those who have minor injuries, minor skin conditions" and says staff can help patients find the best location for treatment and also perform simple exams, such as asking patients to move joints, assessing coughs, colds or rashes, prescribing antibiotics and treating minor injuries.

Hall said ideally, patients would be attached to family physicians or nurse practitioners in an ongoing relationship for disease prevention and treatment, rather than relying on urgent care with one-off visits.

WATCH | N.L. to pay U.S. company for virtual health care
 

No family doc? You can soon get virtual care — for free

11 days ago
Duration 2:30
The Newfoundland and Labrador government is paying a private U.S-based company to provide virtual physician access to anyone without a primary-care option and 24/7 emergency coverage in certain remote areas. But as the CBC’s Mark Quinn reports, many questions have yet to be answered.

Pediatric virtual urgent care a strength

Dr. Catherine Varner, an emergency physician in Toronto and a deputy editor of the CMAJ, wrote an editorial accompanying the study about how virtual care fits into the health-care system now, given the staffing crisis for doctors and nurses in emergency departments.

"In a system of strained resources, we can't afford to provide redundant care to a population that already has good access to care," Varner told CBC News in an interview, adding that pulling emergency department providers away from the bedside needs to be avoided. 

Varner says virtual urgent care can help serve children with less serious issues away from pediatric emergency departments.

Woman in a navy blue coat.
Pulling emergency department providers away from the bedside needs to be avoided in virtual care, says Dr. Catherine Varner, deputy editor of Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Turgut Yeter/CBC)
 
 

Andrea Neilsen, 50, of Edmonton, used a virtual care service when she lived in B.C.'s Fraser Valley for two years. She had previously had surgery for inflammatory bowel disease and needed medication renewed.  

"I just felt a little precarious not having a medical doctor to oversee my care," Neilsen said in an interview. "I looked up their website and it was really user friendly. I had my first appointment and it was a really good experience."

Neilsen says she's now found a family doctor in Edmonton. 

In her editorial, Varner pointed to B.C.'s Real-Time Virtual Supports program as an example of successfully providing virtual urgent care to people in rural, remote and Indigenous communities throughout the province and safely avoiding visits to the emergency department. 

However, she noted that people without access to technology could miss out on virtual care, a gap she said still needs to be addressed.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Amina Zafar

Journalist

Amina Zafar covers medical sciences and health topics, including infectious diseases, for CBC News. She holds an undergraduate degree in environmental science and a master's in journalism.



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