Author: Kalicki, Alexander V.; Moody, Kate A.; Franzosa, Emily; Gliatto, Peter M.; Ornstein, Katherine A.
Title: Barriers to telehealth access among homebound older adults Cord-id: ongrttzt Document date: 2021_4_13
ID: ongrttzt
Snippet: BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: To identify major barriers to videoâ€based telehealth use among homebound older adults. DESIGN: Crossâ€sectional survey. SETTING: A large homeâ€based primary care (HBPC) program in New York City (NYC) serving 873 homebound patients living in the community. PARTICIPANTS: Sixteen primary care physicians. MEASUREMENTS: An 11â€item assessment of provider perceptions of patients' experience with and barriers to telehealth. RESULTS: According to physicians in the HBPC progra
Document: BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: To identify major barriers to videoâ€based telehealth use among homebound older adults. DESIGN: Crossâ€sectional survey. SETTING: A large homeâ€based primary care (HBPC) program in New York City (NYC) serving 873 homebound patients living in the community. PARTICIPANTS: Sixteen primary care physicians. MEASUREMENTS: An 11â€item assessment of provider perceptions of patients' experience with and barriers to telehealth. RESULTS: According to physicians in the HBPC program, more than oneâ€third (35%) of homebound patients (mean age of 82.7; 46.6% with dementia; mean of 4 comorbidities/patient) engaged in firstâ€time videoâ€based telehealth encounters between April and June 2020 during the first COVIDâ€19 surge in NYC. The majority (82%) required assistance from a family member and/or paid caregiver to complete the visit. Among patients who had not used telehealth, providers deemed 27% (n = 153) “unable to interact over video†for reasons including cognitive or sensory impairment and 14% lacked access to a caregiver to assist them with technology. Physicians were not knowledgeable of their patients' internet connectivity, ability to pay for cellular plans, or videoâ€capable device access. CONCLUSION: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic resulted in a large and dramatic shift to videoâ€based telehealth use in homeâ€based primary care. However, 4 months into the pandemic a majority of patients had not participated in a videoâ€based telehealth encounter due to a number of barriers. Patients lacking caregiver support to assist with technology may benefit from novel approaches such as the deployment of community health workers to assist with device setup. Physicians may not be able to identify potentially modifiable barriers to telehealth use among their patients, highlighting the need for better systematic data collection before targeted interventions to increase videoâ€based telehealth use.
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