Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Medicine, Division of Palliative Care and Geriatric Medicine, Boston, MA, USA; Massachusetts General Hospital Mongan Institute, Boston, MA, USA; Harvard Medical School Center for Palliative Care, Boston, MA, USA.
Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Medicine, Division of Palliative Care and Geriatric Medicine, Boston, MA, USA; Massachusetts General Hospital Mongan Institute, Boston, MA, USA.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2021 Jul;22(7):1338-1344. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2021.05.016. Epub 2021 Jun 8.
Approximately 7.5 million US adults are homebound or have difficulty accessing office-based primary care. Home-based primary care (HBPC) provides such patients access to longitudinal medical care at home. The purpose of this study was to describe the challenges and adaptations by HBPC practices made during the first surge of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Mixed-methods national survey.
HBPC practices identified as members of the American Academy of Homecare Medicine (AAHCM) or participants of Home-Centered Care Institute (HCCI) training programs.
Online survey regarding practice responses to COVID-19 surges, COVID-19 testing, the use of telemedicine, practice challenges due to COVID-19, and adaptations to address these challenges. Descriptive statistics and t tests described frequency distributions of nominal and categorical data; qualitative content analysis was used to summarize responses to the open-ended questions.
Seventy-nine practices across 29 states were included in the final analyses. Eighty-five percent of practices continued to provide in-person care and nearly half cared for COVID-19 patients. Most practices pivoted to new use of video visits (76.3%). The most common challenges were as follows: patient lack of familiarity with telemedicine (81.9%), patient anxiety (77.8%), clinician anxiety (69.4%), technical difficulties reaching patients (66.7%), and supply shortages including masks, gown, and disinfecting materials (55.6%). Top adaptive strategies included using telemedicine (95.8%), reducing in-person visits (81.9%), providing resources for patients (52.8%), and staff training in PPE use and COVID testing (52.8%).
HBPC practices experienced a wide array of COVID-19-related challenges. Most continued to see patients in the home, augmented visits with telemedicine and creatively adapted to the challenges. An increased recognition of the need for in-home care by health systems who observed its critical role in caring for fragile older adults may serve as a silver lining to the otherwise dark sky of the COVID-19 pandemic.
大约有 750 万美国成年人行动不便或难以获得基于办公室的初级保健。家庭为基础的初级保健(HBPC)为这些患者提供了在家中接受长期医疗护理的途径。本研究的目的是描述 HBPC 实践在 COVID-19 大流行第一波期间所面临的挑战和调整。
混合方法的全国性调查。
确定为美国家庭医疗学会(AAHCM)成员或参与家庭为中心的护理研究所(HCCI)培训计划的 HBPC 实践。
关于实践对 COVID-19 激增的反应、COVID-19 检测、远程医疗的使用、由于 COVID-19 而产生的实践挑战以及应对这些挑战的调整的在线调查。描述性统计和 t 检验描述了名义和分类数据的频率分布;定性内容分析用于总结对开放式问题的回答。
在最终分析中包括了来自 29 个州的 79 个实践。85%的实践继续提供面对面护理,近一半的实践照顾 COVID-19 患者。大多数实践都转向了新的视频访问(76.3%)。最常见的挑战如下:患者对远程医疗不熟悉(81.9%)、患者焦虑(77.8%)、临床医生焦虑(69.4%)、难以联系到患者的技术困难(66.7%)和供应短缺包括口罩、长袍和消毒材料(55.6%)。顶级适应策略包括使用远程医疗(95.8%)、减少面对面访问(81.9%)、为患者提供资源(52.8%)以及员工培训个人防护设备使用和 COVID 检测(52.8%)。
HBPC 实践经历了广泛的 COVID-19 相关挑战。大多数实践继续在家庭中为患者提供服务,通过远程医疗增加访问量,并创造性地适应挑战。卫生系统对家庭护理的需求增加,认识到其在照顾脆弱的老年人方面的关键作用,这可能是 COVID-19 大流行这一黑暗天空中的一线希望。