Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.
University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book. 2021 Mar;41:25-36. doi: 10.1200/EDBK_320827.
In its most direct interpretation, telemedicine is medical care provided at a distance. Although telemedicine's use had been steadily increasing, the COVID-19 pandemic prompted an unprecedented interest and urgency among patients, health care professionals, and policymakers to facilitate health care devoid of the need for in-person contact. The growth in personal access to telecommunications technology meant an unprecedented number of people in the United States and around the world had access to the equipment and technology that would make virtual care possible from the home. As the mass implementation of telemedicine unfolded, it became quickly apparent that scaling up the use of telemedicine presented considerable new challenges, some of which worsened disparities. This article describes those challenges by examining the history of telemedicine, its role in both supporting access and creating new barriers to access in trying to get everyone connected, frameworks for thinking about those barriers, and facilitators that may help overcome them, with a particular focus on older adults and patients with cancer in rural communities.
从最直接的意义上讲,远程医疗是指在远程提供的医疗服务。尽管远程医疗的使用一直在稳步增加,但 COVID-19 大流行促使患者、医疗保健专业人员和政策制定者前所未有地关注和迫切需要促进无需面对面接触的医疗保健。个人获得电信技术的机会增加意味着美国和世界各地有前所未有的人数可以使用设备和技术,从而可以从家中进行虚拟护理。随着远程医疗的大规模实施,很快就明显看出,扩大远程医疗的使用带来了相当多的新挑战,其中一些挑战加剧了差距。本文通过考察远程医疗的历史、它在支持和创造新的获取障碍方面的作用,以及思考这些障碍的框架,以及可能有助于克服这些障碍的促进因素,来描述这些挑战,特别关注农村社区的老年人和癌症患者。