MaineHealth Institute for Research, Scarborough, ME, United States.
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University, Boston, MA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2024 Oct 17;12:1433476. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1433476. eCollection 2024.
People with structural vulnerabilities (including immigrants, people who use drugs, and those who are unhoused or uninsured) are more likely to experience COVID-19 testing disparities relative to other groups. We documented barriers and facilitators to COVID-19 testing and explored how structural vulnerabilities created and/or exacerbated COVID-19 testing barriers.
Between 2021 and 2022, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 34 members of structurally vulnerable populations and 27 key informants who provide health and social services to them. Our abductive analysis was iterative, utilizing both inductive and deductive coding processes. Recognizing that adequate and appropriate testing for COVID-19 is a complex health behavior that involves both decision-making and issues related to access, we developed a hybrid model of COVID-19 testing behavior to organize reported barriers. We then used that model for more in-depth analysis of structural vulnerabilities in the context of testing.
Our model of testing behaviors provides a framework for understanding the many barriers and facilitators relevant to COVID-19 testing. After identifying locally-reported barriers, we found that specific conditions-economic precarity, legal precarity, the confusing U.S. healthcare landscape, English-exclusive environments, and stigmatizing medical encounters-make adequate and appropriate testing less likely by making COVID-19 testing feel riskier (entailing legal, financial, and psycho-social risks) and making healthcare, and thus vicariously testing, more difficult to access.
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed disparities in health care delivery. To avoid under-testing and its associated health consequences during the next pandemic, public health efforts should address structural conditions to ameliorate risks and bolster testing infrastructure to improve access.
结构脆弱人群(包括移民、吸毒者、无家可归者或无保险者)与其他群体相比,更有可能经历 COVID-19 检测方面的差异。我们记录了 COVID-19 检测的障碍和促进因素,并探讨了结构脆弱性如何产生和/或加剧 COVID-19 检测障碍。
在 2021 年至 2022 年期间,我们对 34 名结构脆弱人群成员和 27 名为他们提供健康和社会服务的关键信息提供者进行了半结构化访谈。我们的归纳分析是迭代的,利用了归纳和演绎编码过程。我们认识到,COVID-19 的充分和适当检测是一种复杂的健康行为,涉及决策和与获取相关的问题,因此我们开发了 COVID-19 检测行为的混合模型来组织报告的障碍。然后,我们使用该模型更深入地分析了测试背景下的结构脆弱性。
我们的测试行为模型为理解与 COVID-19 测试相关的许多障碍和促进因素提供了一个框架。在确定了当地报告的障碍后,我们发现具体条件——经济不稳定、法律不稳定、混乱的美国医疗保健环境、仅限英语的环境和污名化的医疗接触——通过使 COVID-19 测试感觉风险更高(涉及法律、财务和心理社会风险)并使医疗保健,从而间接地使测试更难获得,从而使适当和适当的测试变得不太可能。
COVID-19 大流行暴露了医疗保健提供方面的差异。为了避免在下一次大流行期间检测不足及其相关的健康后果,公共卫生工作应解决结构性条件,以减轻风险并加强检测基础设施,以改善获取途径。