Sociodemographic differences in patient experience with virtual care during COVID-19

Autor: Debbie Elman, Christopher Meaney, Ali Damji, Susanna Fung, Gina Yip, Thuy Nga Pham, Melissa Witty, Navsheer Gill Toor, Payal Agarwal, Rick Wang, Tara Kiran, Tiffany Florindo, Noor Ramji, Sakina Walji
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
DOI: 10.1101/2021.07.19.21260373
Popis: PurposeWe sought to understand patients’ care-seeking behaviours during the pandemic, their use and views of different virtual care modalities, and whether these differed by sociodemographic factors.MethodsWe conducted a multi-site cross-sectional patient experience survey at thirteen academic primary care teaching practices between May and June of 2020. An anonymized link to an electronic survey was sent to a subset of patients with a valid email address on file; sampling was based on birth month. For each question, the proportion of respondents who selected each response was calculated, followed by a comparison by sociodemographic characteristics using chi-squared tests.ResultsIn total, 7482 participants responded to the survey. Most received care from their primary care clinic during the pandemic (67.7%, 5068/7482), the majority via phone (82.5%, 4195/5086). Among those who received care, 30.53% (1509/4943) stated that they delayed seeking care because of the pandemic. Most participants reported a high degree of comfort with phone (92.4%, 3824/4139), video (95.2%, 238/250) and email or messaging (91.3%, 794/870). However, those reporting difficulty making ends meet, poor or fair health, and arriving in Canada in the last 10 years reported lower levels of comfort with virtual care and fewer wanted their practice to continue offering virtual options after the pandemic.ConclusionsOur study suggest that newcomers, people living with a lower income, and those reporting poor or fair health have a stronger preference and comfort for in-person primary care. Further research should explore potential barriers to virtual care and how these could be addressed.
Databáze: OpenAIRE