Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center (GRECC), James J Peters VA Medical Center, 130 W. Kingsbridge Rd, 4A-17, Bronx, VA, 10468, USA.
Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 May 6;22(1):609. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08010-5.
Older persons living with HIV (PLWH) need routine healthcare to manage HIV and other comorbidities. This mixed methods study investigated digital equity, constituted as access, use and quality, of HIV and specialty telehealth services for PLWH > 50 years during the initial wave of the COVID-19 pandemic when services transitioned to remote care.
A survey of closed and open-ended questions was administered to 80 English (N = 63) and Spanish (N = 17) speaking PLWH receiving HIV care at an Academic Medical Center (N = 50) or a Federally Qualified Health Center (N = 30) in New York State. Quantitative analyses examined characteristics predicting telehealth use and visit quality. Qualitative analyses utilized thematic coding to reveal common experiences. Results were integrated to deepen the interpretation.
Telehealth access and use were shaped by multiple related and unstable factors including devices and connectivity, technology literacy, and comfort including privacy concerns. Participants demonstrated their substantial effort to achieve the visit. The majority of patients with a telehealth visit perceived it as worse than an in-person visit by describing it as less interpersonal, and resulting in poorer outcomes, particularly participants with less formal education. Technology was not only a barrier to access, but also influenced perceptions of quality.
In the COVID-19 pandemic initial wave, barriers to using telehealth were unequally distributed to those with more significant access and use challenges. Beyond these barriers, examining the components of equity indicate further challenges replicating in-person care using telehealth formats for older PLWH. Work remains to establish telehealth as both equitable and desirable for this population.
感染艾滋病病毒(HIV)的老年人(PLWH)需要常规医疗保健来管理 HIV 和其他合并症。本混合方法研究调查了在 COVID-19 大流行初期,当服务转向远程护理时,HIV 和专科远程医疗服务对 >50 岁的 PLWH 的数字公平性,数字公平性由获取、使用和质量构成。
对在纽约州一家学术医疗中心(N=63)和一家联邦合格的健康中心(N=30)接受 HIV 护理的 80 名英语(N=63)和西班牙语(N=17)讲者的 PLWH 进行了一项包含封闭式和开放式问题的调查。定量分析检查了预测远程医疗使用和就诊质量的特征。定性分析利用主题编码揭示了共同的经验。结果进行了整合,以深化解释。
远程医疗的获取和使用受到多种相关且不稳定因素的影响,包括设备和连接、技术素养以及包括隐私问题在内的舒适度。参与者为实现就诊付出了巨大的努力。大多数进行远程医疗就诊的患者认为,与面对面就诊相比,远程医疗就诊的体验较差,描述为缺乏人际互动,导致治疗效果较差,尤其是那些受教育程度较低的患者。技术不仅是获取的障碍,还影响了对质量的看法。
在 COVID-19 大流行初期,使用远程医疗的障碍对那些面临更大获取和使用挑战的人不平等分布。除了这些障碍之外,检查公平性的组成部分表明,对于老年 PLWH,使用远程医疗格式复制面对面护理存在进一步的挑战。仍需要努力使远程医疗对这一人群既公平又受欢迎。