Selick Avra, Durbin Janet, Hamdani Yani, Rayner Jennifer, Lunsky Yona
Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Azrieli Adult Neurodevelopmental Centre, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada.
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Aug 22;6(8):e38916. doi: 10.2196/38916.
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to an unprecedented increase in the delivery of virtual primary care. Adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDDs) have complex health care needs, and little is known about the value and appropriateness of virtual care for this patient population.
The aim of this study was to explore the accessibility of virtual primary care for patients with IDDs during the pandemic.
We conducted semistructured interviews with 38 participants in Ontario, Canada between March and November 2021. A maximum variation sampling strategy was used to achieve a diverse sample including 11 adults with IDDs, 13 family caregivers, 5 IDD support staff members, and 9 primary care physicians. An iterative mixed inductive and deductive thematic analysis approach was used to code the data and synthesize higher-level themes. The analysis was informed by the Levesque Patient-Centered Access to Health Care Framework.
We identified themes related to 4 of 5 access-to-care dimensions that highlighted both the benefits and challenges of virtual care for adults with IDDs. The benefits included saving time spent traveling and waiting; avoiding anxiety and challenging behavior for patients who struggle to attend in-person visits; allowing caregivers who live far away from their loved ones to participate; reducing illness transmission; and allowing health care providers to see patients in their home environments. The challenges included lack of access to necessary technology, lack of comfort or skill using technology, and lack of nonverbal communication; difficulty engaging and establishing rapport; patient exclusion from the health care encounter; and concerns about privacy and confidentiality. An overarching theme was that "one size does not fit all," and the accessibility of virtual care was dependent on the interaction between the following 5 categories of factors: patient characteristics, patient context, caregiver characteristics, service context, and reason for a particular primary care visit. Though virtual care was not always appropriate, in some cases, it dramatically improved patients' abilities to access necessary health care.
This study suggests that a flexible patient-centered system including multiple delivery modalities is needed to ensure all patients have access to primary care. Implementing this system will require improved virtual care platforms, access to technology for patients and caregivers, training for primary care providers, and appropriately aligned primary care funding models.
新冠疫情导致虚拟初级保健的提供出现了前所未有的增长。患有智力和发育障碍(IDD)的成年人有复杂的医疗保健需求,而对于这一患者群体而言,虚拟护理的价值和适用性却知之甚少。
本研究的目的是探讨疫情期间患有IDD的患者获得虚拟初级保健的可及性。
2021年3月至11月期间,我们对加拿大安大略省的38名参与者进行了半结构化访谈。采用最大差异抽样策略以获得多样化的样本,包括11名患有IDD的成年人、13名家庭护理人员、5名IDD支持工作人员和9名初级保健医生。采用归纳与演绎相结合的迭代主题分析方法对数据进行编码并综合提炼出更高层次的主题。该分析以勒维克以患者为中心的医疗保健可及性框架为依据。
我们确定了与5个医疗保健可及性维度中的4个相关的主题,这些主题突出了虚拟护理对患有IDD的成年人的益处和挑战。益处包括节省出行和等待时间;避免那些难以参加面对面就诊的患者产生焦虑和出现挑战性行为;使居住在远离亲人地方的护理人员能够参与其中;减少疾病传播;以及让医疗保健提供者在患者家中环境看病。挑战包括无法获得必要的技术、使用技术时缺乏舒适度或技能、缺乏非语言交流;难以建立互动和融洽关系;患者被排除在医疗保健接触之外;以及对隐私和保密性的担忧。一个总体主题是“一刀切并不适用”,虚拟护理的可及性取决于以下5类因素之间的相互作用:患者特征、患者背景、护理人员特征、服务背景以及特定初级保健就诊的原因。虽然虚拟护理并非总是合适,但在某些情况下,它显著提高了患者获得必要医疗保健的能力。
本研究表明,需要一个灵活的、以患者为中心的系统,包括多种提供方式,以确保所有患者都能获得初级保健。实施该系统将需要改进虚拟护理平台、为患者和护理人员提供技术接入、对初级保健提供者进行培训以及适当调整初级保健资金模式。