Johnson Leslie C M, Josiah Willock Robina, Simmons Sierra, Moyd Sarahna, Geiger Demetrius, Ghali Jalal K, Quarells Rakale C
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, 1518 Clifton Rd, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Morehouse School of Medicine, 720 Westview Drive, Atlanta, GA, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Feb;12(1):181-190. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01862-5. Epub 2024 May 3.
Heart failure and diabetes are comorbidities that disproportionately contribute to high morbidity and mortality among Blacks. Further compounding the racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19 health outcomes, Blacks with cardiometabolic diseases are at high risk of experiencing serious complications or mortality from COVID-19. This study aimed to assess how Blacks with heart failure and diabetes navigated chronic care management during the COVID-19 pandemic.
A mixed methods study including in-depth interviews and surveys with adults diagnosed with heart failure and diabetes (n = 17) was conducted in 2021-2022. Verbatim transcripts were analyzed using a thematic analysis approach.
Participants reported that while the pandemic initially caused delays in access to health services, shifts to telemedicine allowed for continued care despite preferences for in-person appointments. Various sources of information were used in different ways to make decisions on how to best reduce health risks due to COVID-19, but individuals and institutions affiliated with science and medicine, or who promoted information from these sources, were considered to be the most trusted sources of information among those who relied on outside guidance when making health-related decisions. Individuals' self-awareness of their own high-risk status and perceived control over their exposure levels to the virus informed what COVID-19 prevention and mitigation strategies people used.
Information backed by scientific data was an important health communication tool that alongside other factors, such as fear of mortality due to COVID-19, encouraged individuals to get vaccinated and adopt other COVID-19 prevention and mitigation behaviors.
心力衰竭和糖尿病是合并症,在黑人中导致高发病率和死亡率的比例过高。新冠疫情健康结果中的种族和族裔差异进一步加剧,患有心脏代谢疾病的黑人感染新冠病毒后出现严重并发症或死亡的风险很高。本研究旨在评估患有心力衰竭和糖尿病的黑人在新冠疫情期间如何进行慢性病管理。
2021年至2022年进行了一项混合方法研究,包括对17名被诊断患有心力衰竭和糖尿病的成年人进行深入访谈和调查。使用主题分析方法对逐字记录进行分析。
参与者报告称,虽然疫情最初导致获得医疗服务的延迟,但转向远程医疗使得尽管人们更喜欢面对面就诊,但仍能继续接受治疗。人们以不同方式使用各种信息来源,以决定如何最好地降低因新冠病毒导致的健康风险,但与科学和医学相关或推广这些来源信息的个人和机构,在那些在做出与健康相关的决策时依赖外部指导的人中,被认为是最值得信赖的信息来源。个人对自身高风险状态的自我认知以及对自己接触病毒程度的感知控制,决定了人们采取何种新冠病毒预防和缓解策略。
科学数据支持的信息是一种重要的健康传播工具,与其他因素(如对新冠病毒导致死亡的恐惧)一起,鼓励人们接种疫苗并采取其他新冠病毒预防和缓解行为。