key: cord-1049083-qlxwjpqb authors: Myers, Ursula S.; Birks, Anna; Grubaugh, Anouk L.; Axon, R. Neal title: Flattening the Curve by Getting Ahead of It: How the VA Healthcare System Is Leveraging Telehealth to Provide Continued Access to Care for Rural Veterans date: 2020-04-13 journal: J Rural Health DOI: 10.1111/jrh.12449 sha: 4ef085db060fbdf151141657268dde5beb8fae85 doc_id: 1049083 cord_uid: qlxwjpqb nan widespread isolation due to recommended social distancing guidelines. COVID-19 has profoundly impacted the health and health care of millions of Americans, especially rural citizens who are generally older and often more medically vulnerable than the overall US population. In addition to the direct effects on people infected with COVID-19, the pandemic will very likely adversely impact access to care and outcomes for individuals with chronic medical and mental health disorders. In the realm of mental health alone, patients surviving the disease and their loved ones may experience an exacerbation of a preexisting mental health disorder at the very time their ability to initiate or complete a recommended treatment program is curtailed. In particular, high-risk patients such as those with alcohol and substance use disorders will be in self-isolation at home without the benefit of needed support by way of group therapy, individual psychotherapy, and/or drug treatment programs. 2 As the US scrambles to deliver health care during the COVID-19 pandemic, expanding telehealth services has become the most prominently employed access strategy across the majority of health care systems. Current projections estimate there could be 1 billion telehealth appointments conducted in 2020, compared to the original pre-COVID projection of 36 million virtual visits for 2020. 3 Further, a number of important policies and federal regulations have been quickly changed or relaxed to allow systems to meet an unanticipated and unprecedented demand. Fortunately, in its commitment to providing veterans access to specialized medical and mental health care, the Veterans Health to promote and disseminate research and programs to benefit America's nearly 5 million rural veterans, currently funds 20 virtual care programs and champions expansion of broadband services through public-private partnerships. 5 The VA Office of Connected Care further promotes access to health care for veterans by offering a web-based patient record system (MyHealth eVet) and over 3 dozen mobile apps addressing a wide variety of medical conditions (VA Mobile). 6 Further, these 2 offices collaborate to maintain a national network of telehealth resource hubs which provide care and training to provide in-home access to mental health, specialty, and primary care services. As a result of these and other telehealth initiatives, the VHA is currently the largest telehealth provider in the US. Collectively, VAs nationwide conducted over a million telehealth visits in 2018. More than half of these visits were for veterans located in rural areas, and 10% of these visits used VA Video Connect (VVC), a secure videoteleconferencing platform, which allows providers to treat veterans on their mobile devices or personal computers at a location of the veteran's choice. 7 Simultaneously in 2018, the US Networks (MISSION) Act, which included mandates for VHA to establish an "Anywhere to Anywhere" telehealth network. 8 This law seeks to ensure that by 2021, 100% of VHA providers in outpatient Mental Health and Primary Care service lines nationwide will be both capable and experienced with providing VVC to non-VA locations. COVID-19 has necessitated this 2021 timeline to be rapidly accelerated. Fortunately, because of its prior investments and infrastructure, VHA is primed to minimize disruptions to health care as a result of COVID-19 and the social distancing required to flatten the curve of this virus. In order to meet the enormous health care challenge COVID-19 has created, the VHA is rapidly increasing the number of outpatient appointments conducted via VVC so veterans in a targeted effort to curb the inappropriate distribution of opioids such as Oxycontin by "pill mills" during the peak of the opioid epidemic by requiring the first visit with a provider to prescribe schedule II-IV controlled substances take place in person. Now, and in response to COVID-19, in-person visits are not required to provide prescriptions issued for a legitimate medical purpose in accordance with federal and state law. Instead, in-person visits can now be substituted with an audio-visual, real-time, 2-way interactive communication system. 10 Although necessary, this more relaxed policy change raises the question of if and to what degree there will be an increase in instances of drug diversion. Additionally, will disruptions in prescriptions for controlled substances, particularly drugs such as buprenorphine-naloxone (Suboxone®) used to treat opioid addiction, be associated with increased rates of illicit drug use, overdose, or death, particularly among those unable to access the needed technology to obtain prescriptions using a virtual visit? It remains to be seen what the impact of COVID-19 will be on the health of Americans, including the consequences of potential gaps and delays in care and the rapid expansion of telehealth policy. This will undoubtedly be an important area of future study for health services researchers given the wide-scale implications for health care access, policy, technology, implementation science, and medication safety. It is likely that the VHA's early adoption and dissemination of telehealth along with swift deployment of creative solutions to expand services in response to COVID-19, can mitigate the impact of this virus on the health of veterans. Additionally, however, the VHA can serve as a unique laboratory in which to measure the impact of COVID-19 on access to care and outcomes, given its national presence and the availability of a vast network of integrated health record and data systems. Many of the lessons learned from COVID-19 can be used by VHA in preparation for potential future pandemics or a similar national emergency restricting or impacting travel. Additionally, the VHA can serve as an instructive model for the rest of the nation and other health care systems regarding telehealth implementation. Finally, the rapid expansion of telehealth in response to COVID-19 within VHA and subsequent refinements to the system can be used to more immediately improve the health and well-being of veterans facing ongoing access to care barriers, such as those residing in rural areas. COVID-19): Cases in US With meetings banned, millions struggle to stay sober on their own Telehealth visits are booming as doctors and patients embrace distancing amid the coronavirus crisis The growth of telehealth services in the Veterans Health Administration between 1994 and 2014: a study in the diffusion of innovation Office of Rural Health Connected Care: Expanding Veteran Access to Care Through Virtual Technologies. VA Office of Connected Care website VA exceeds 1 million video telehealth visits in FY2018: One-year achievement represents a 19% Department of Veterans Affairs. VA Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (MISSON) Act Notification of Enforcement Discretion for telehealth remote communications during the COVID-19 nationwide public health emergency COVID-19: Controlled Substance Prescribing Through Telehealth During the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency