Resilience in Health Care: The Role of Telemedicine and e-Health Enabling Adaptive Strategies in Sleep Medicine Practice During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Mithri R Junna, Amy Glasgow, Timothy I Morgenthaler
Abstract
Open AccessBackground: The COVID-19 pandemic brought profound changes to health care systems worldwide. This study examines the adaptive responses of a sleep medicine practice that successfully pivoted to telemedicine, remote diagnostics, and agile operations, resulting in sustained growth and improved patient accessibility. Methods: We analyzed organizational and cultural elements enabling responsiveness, including telemedicine infrastructure, adaptive leadership, quality-focused processes, and effective communication. Objective outcomes were assessed by analyzing patient demographics, telemedicine visits, and sleep testing patterns during three phases: pre-pandemic (June 1, 2018 to March 8, 2020), acute COVID-19 (March 9, 2020 to April 19, 2020), and post-acute COVID-19 (April 20, 2020 to December 31, 2021). Results: Across 105,199 encounters, monthly sleep medicine visits and testing declined ∼50% during acute COVID-19, but rebounded to surpass baseline in the post-acute phase. Virtual visits increased significantly, replacing many face-to-face encounters. Home sleep apnea test use rose sharply, driven by disposable WatchPAT tests, while polysomnography use decreased. Testing volumes increased overall post-acute compared with pre-pandemic. Patients served during acute and post-acute phases were younger, more often female, non-White, and postgraduate-educated (all p < 0.001). Nonlocal patients increased during the post-acute phase, reflecting telemedicine expansion. Conclusions: Proactive telemedicine investments, adaptive leadership, quality-focused processes, and effective communication enabled this practice to adapt successfully during the pandemic. These resilience strategies provide a model for navigating future health care challenges, underscoring telemedicine and e-health's critical roles in maintaining care delivery during crises.