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Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care

Virtual care is growing rapidly across the country as more primary care providers use technology to deliver healthcare. That’s why Healthcare Excellence Canada has launched an initiative to help care providers and patients work together to ensure virtual care is provided in an appropriate, safe and equitable way.

An adult and a child are sitting together in a kitchen, having a video call with a doctor on a laptop. The background shows a countertop with a bowl of fruit. Bright pink and orange geometric shapes frame the image.
Topics
  • Health Equity
  • Patient safety
  • Primary and community care
Audience
  • Community organization

  • Healthcare leader

  • Point of care provider

Collaborative activities

Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care supported primary care practices, organizations and multidisciplinary teams from across Canada to work in partnership with the patients, families, caregivers and communities they supported to determine when and how virtual care should be used in their unique healthcare settings.

Through this program, participants:

  • Gained QI skills and knowledge about appropriate virtual care.

  • Built capacity to partner with patients and communities to determine when to use virtual care, based on patient needs and capabilities, their care requirements – including those in rural, remote or northern locations – and clinician capacity.

  • Helped ensure appropriate access to virtual care for diverse populations, including rural and remote, First Nations, Inuit and Métis, and other underserved populations.

  • Developed a functional framework for evaluating when and how virtual care could be used appropriately in their unique healthcare setting.

HEC supported 39 teams across 135 care sites and nine provinces between January 2023 and January 2024.

This initiative built on the Virtual Care Together design collaborative, delivered in partnership by HEC and Canada Health Infoway.

Outcomes and Impact

Participating Team Outcomes

  • 85% reported achieving their project target towards improving patient/client experience of care

  • 78% reported achieving their project target towards improving provider experience of care

  • 73% reported achieving their project target towards increasing access to care

  • 74% reported achieving their project target towards reducing avoidable ED visits

Team Member Outcomes

  • 93% felt more knowledgeable about the appropriate use of virtual care in their organization

  • 89% felt more prepared to partner with clinicians/providers

  • 88% felt more prepared to partner with patients and people with lived experience

Patient Reach

  • 21,236 patients were directly reached during the 12-month PAVC program; another 190,740 were expected to be reached in 2024 as more projects began implementation.

Patients reported feeling valued and empowered, receiving timely care that effectively met their needs, and satisfaction with their care experience.

Map of Canada showing 9 teams in British Columbia, six teams in Alberta, two teams in Saskatchewan, three teams in Manitoba, 11 teams in Ontario, three teams in Quebec, one team in Nova Scotia, two teams in Prince Edward Island and two teams in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Participating Teams

Healthcare Excellence Canada supported 39 teams across 135 sites and nine provinces to participate in Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care, an initiative that helped them work in partnership with patients, families, caregivers and communities to determine when and how virtual care should be used in their unique settings in an appropriate, safe and equitable way.

As part of their participation, each team was supported to develop a functional framework for evaluating when and how virtual care can be used appropriately.

The urban, rural and remote care settings included primary, community, acute and long-term care. Services provided included chronic disease prevention and management, mental health and addictions, and specialty care such as pediatric care, geriatric care and palliative care. They served diverse groups including vulnerable populations, older adults, First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities and newcomers to Canada. Project Themes:

  • Equity and inclusive access

  • Integrated people-centred care

  • Culturally safe care with and for indigenous communities

  • Social services & support to community

  • Remote/virtual patient monitoring

  • Safety in virtual care & safe care transitions

  • Virtual care integration, infrastructure & development

  • Rehabilitation services

  • Language services

Meet the teams

The following teams participated in Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care

Promising Practices for Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care

Virtual care is growing rapidly across the country, as more primary care providers use technology to deliver healthcare. Healthcare Excellence Canada (HEC) launched an initiative to help care providers and patients work together to ensure virtual care is provided in an appropriate, safe and equitable way. Through a 12-month collaborative program HEC supported 39 teams across Canada to develop a functional framework for determining when and how virtual care could be used appropriately, safely and equitably in their unique care settings, fostering partnerships with patients, families and communities for effective healthcare delivery.

Each promising practice features each of these elements:

Objective and purpose of the promising practice

Approach

Impacts and learnings

Summaries of the Promising Practices

This summary profiles promising practices developed by nine participating teams that aim to improve healthcare access and outcomes, reduce avoidable emergency department (ED) visits, foster patient-provider partnerships and ensure virtual care access for diverse populations. These innovative frameworks highlight:

  • equity and inclusive access

  • safety in virtual care

  • integrated people centered care.

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