Maccabi-RED, mHealth innovation in community emergency care: a 4-year analysis of adoption patterns and impact on healthcare utilization

Ilan Yehoshua, Osnat Bashkin, Tamar Shalom, Limor Adler

Keywords: Community emergency care, Mobile Health

Background:

Emergency department overcrowding due to non-urgent visits places a considerable burden on the healthcare system. Mobile health (mHealth) technologies offer potential solutions by providing community-based alternatives for emergency care. In this study, we analyzed 4 years of implementation data from Maccabi-RED, a smartphone app-based emergency care service launched in 2019 by Israel’s second-largest healthcare maintenance organization

Research questions:

Who are the patients using the service through mHealth ?What was their appointment adherence patterns, and subsequent healthcare utilization ?

Method:

Retrospective analysis of the electronic health records for all patient-initiated emergency care requests made through the Maccabi-RED app between January 2020 and December 2023.
The analysis encompassed 48,972 approved requests from 41,313 patients, comprising demographic characteristics, appointment adherence patterns, and subsequent healthcare utilization within 7 days. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, t-tests, and multivariable logistic regression models.

Results:

Overall appointment attendance was 76.9%, improving from 52.4% in 2020 to 80.0% in 2023. Older patients (>51 years) had 29% higher attendance odds compared with younger patients (<19 years). Foreign body emergencies showed the highest attendance rates (72.6%), while surgical cases had the lowest (17.2%). The median wait time from request to appointment was 30.5 minutes, decreasing from 44.0 minutes in 2020 to 30.0 minutes in 2021–2023. Patients attending Maccabi-RED appointments had 16% lower odds of subsequent family physician visits and 41% lower odds of emergency medical center visits within 7 days, with no increase in emergency department visits or hospitalizations. However, geographic disparities emerged, with residents in peripheral areas showing lower attendance rates despite shorter wait times

Conclusions:

This study demonstrates that smartphone-based emergency care services can effectively reduce the burden on the healthcare system while maintaining patient safety, although targeted interventions are needed to address geographic and demographic disparities in access and utilization

Points for discussion:

How could the differences in appointment attendance between the ages could be explained ?

How could the time from request to appointment drop over the years could be explained ?

Was there a better way for conducting this study?

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