# Telehealth Emergency Department Transition-of-care Program: A Value-based Innovation

**Authors:** Allyson Kreshak, Itzik Fadlon, Karna Malaviya, Vaishal Tolia, Lindsey Pierce, Theodore Chan, Parag Agnihotri, Ming Tai-Seale

PMC · DOI: 10.5811/westjem.41524 · Western Journal of Emergency Medicine · 2025-09-01

## TL;DR

A telehealth program in emergency departments reduced Medicare patients' return visits within two weeks, with potential cost savings.

## Contribution

A telehealth transition-of-care program is shown to reduce ED revisits for Medicare patients in the short term.

## Key findings

- Medicare patients had a 1.77% lower 14-day ED revisit rate after the program launch compared to the control group.
- The program increased post-discharge primary care visits by 1.51% at 14 days and 30 days.
- The program saved an estimated $215,779 over 24 weeks.

## Abstract

Our Emergency Department (ED) and Population Health Services Organization developed a telehealth ED-transition of care program (TOC) for patients insured through value-based contracts. This study’s goal was to determine the association of our ED-TOC on ED revisits. We hypothesized that the ED-TOC would decrease ED revisits.

This was a retrospective cohort study conducted between August 1, 2021 and July 31, 2023 at two EDs where an ED-TOC is available. Included were ED visits among discharged Medicare beneficiaries that occurred one year before and after the launch of the ED-TOC program. ED visits involving Medicaid beneficiaries served as the control. A difference-in-differences (DID) strategy was used to compare Medicare and Medicaid visits. The primary outcome measure was the association of the program with 14- and 30- day ED revisit rates. Secondary outcomes were the association of the ED-TOC with post-discharge PCP visits and hospitalizations and estimated cost-savings associated with the program.

Our sample size was 23,696 ED encounters (13,553 treatment group and 10,143 control group). At 14-days after ED discharge, Medicare beneficiaries were associated with a 1.77% decrease in the rate of ED revisits in the year after the ED-TOC launch relative to the control (p=0.03) or a 15.8% reduction relative to baseline (11.2% to 9.4%). At 14-days after ED discharge, PCP visits were associated with a 1.51% increase in the year after program launch relative to the control (p=0.03) or a 10.3% increase relative to baseline (14.6% to 16.1%). No difference was associated with Medicare beneficiaries’ ED revisits or hospitalizations at 30-days. PCP visits were associated with a significant increase at 30-days (p=0.005).

An ED-TOC is associated with a reduction in Medicare ED revisits during days 8–14 after an index ED visit but not during days 1–7 days or at 30-days. Cost savings over a 24-week period are conservatively calculated to be $215,779.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12591659/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12591659