04/06/2026 | Press release | Archived content
BACKGROUND:
Emergency department (ED) crowding contributes to care delays, adverse patient outcomes, and provider burnout. Tele-emergency care (TEC) enables real-time virtual encounters with emergency clinicians following triage by the VA nurse advice line, offering Veterans timely access to emergency medicine expertise without requiring an in-person ED visit. In this national evaluation, investigators reviewed calls to the VA nurse advice line from January 2018 through April 2024 to examine associations between TEC receipt, visit modality (phone vs. video), and clinician type (physician vs. advanced practice clinician) and subsequent healthcare use relative to standard nurse advice line recommendations. The primary outcome was ED (VA and non-VA) use within 7 days of the index nurse advice line call. Secondary outcomes included hospitalization within 7 days, 30-day mortality, and concordance between the clinical recommendation and the Veteran's subsequent action. Three types of calls were included in the evaluation: "emergent 911" (advised to call 911 but declined), "emergent" (evaluation within 2 hours), and "urgent" (evaluation within 2 to 8 hours). Of more than 2.5 million calls during the evaluation period, nearly 100,000 calls resulted in a TEC visit.
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AUTHOR/FUNDING INFORMATION:
This evaluation was co-funded by QUERI (QUERI EBP 22-108). Drs. Tran and Rose are with HSR's Health Economics Resource Center (HERC). Drs. Ferguson and Vashi and Ms. Urech are with HSR's Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i).