Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Boston Children's Hospital, Boston Massachusetts.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Boston Children's Hospital, Boston Massachusetts; Massachusetts Eye & Ear, Boston Massachusetts.
J AAPOS. 2022 Aug;26(4):195-196. doi: 10.1016/j.jaapos.2022.03.006. Epub 2022 Jun 1.
We hypothesized that children with low socioeconomic status (SES) had disproportionately fewer eye care visits during the early COVID-19 pandemic and that these children would be less likely to use synchronous provider-to-patient telemedicine eye care visits. This study investigated changes in patient demographics at a large, academic pediatric eye center before and after the pandemic. A retrospective review of all visits from March 18, 2019, to May 31, 2019 (pre-COVID period) and of the same date range in 2020 (COVID period) was performed. Patient addresses were used to calculate the Area Deprivation Index (ADI), a validated measure of a neighborhood's SES. Patients who identified as non-White, and those requiring an interpreter had relatively fewer visits during the COVID period compared to the pre-COVID period. In addition, relatively fewer telemedicine visits were performed with patients who lived in a neighborhood classified as at or above the 50th ADI percentile (more disadvantaged).
我们假设社会经济地位(SES)较低的儿童在 COVID-19 大流行早期接受眼科护理的次数不成比例地减少,而且这些儿童不太可能使用同步的医患远程眼科护理。本研究调查了一家大型学术儿科眼科中心在大流行前后患者人口统计学特征的变化。对 2019 年 3 月 18 日至 5 月 31 日(COVID-19 前时期)和 2020 年同期的所有就诊(COVID-19 时期)进行了回顾性审查。使用患者地址计算了区域贫困指数(ADI),这是衡量社区 SES 的一个经过验证的指标。与 COVID-19 前时期相比,非白人患者和需要口译员的患者在 COVID-19 时期的就诊次数相对较少。此外,与居住在被归类为 ADI 等于或高于第 50 百分位(更贫困)的街区的患者相比,进行的远程医疗就诊相对较少。