Evaluating access during change: A qualitative exploration of access impacts to Canadian primary care rehabilitation providers during the COVID-19 pandemic

Tory Crawford, Louise Chartrand, Cara Brown, Brontë Vollebregt, Patricia Thille
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Abstract

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic required substantial changes in delivery of team-based primary care, impacting both how and which patients accessed the more comprehensive services teams provide. We sought to explore changes in access to primary care rehabilitation services during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic to identify potential new problems and improvements.

Methods

In this longitudinal study, sixteen rehabilitation professionals working on primary care teams in Manitoba and Ontario recorded audio-diaries and later participated in interviews throughout the first year of the pandemic. Qualitative analysis included data immersion, coding to identify the practice changes and associated access impacts, then applying Levesque and colleagues’ Patient-Centred Access to Healthcare framework to interpret findings.

Findings

Participants described service changes that both enhanced and reduced access, including redeployment, outreach, virtual care, discontinuation of some services and start of new ones, and new risk management strategies. Some implied equity-specific impacts. Virtual care and outreach activities created access for patient populations who previously may have been underserved, while virtual care, redeployment, and new risk management activities created new access barriers and inequities, leaving some patients completely unable to reach care. Changes to team collaboration activities could help or hinder access.

Conclusion

Continuing outreach activities, strengthening team collaboration, and thoughtfully integrating virtual care can improve access to comprehensive primary care. As the primary care sector works to recover from pandemic impacts and address population health needs, applying a patient-centred access framework during practice redesign offers a meaningful way to strengthen services.
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评估变革期间的就医情况:定性探索 COVID-19 大流行期间对加拿大初级保健康复提供者的影响
导言:COVID-19 大流行要求以团队为基础的初级医疗服务的提供方式发生重大变化,这对患者如何以及哪些患者获得团队提供的更全面的服务产生了影响。在这项纵向研究中,16 名在马尼托巴省和安大略省基层医疗团队工作的康复专业人员录制了录音日记,随后在大流行的第一年参与了访谈。定性分析包括数据沉浸、编码以识别实践变化和相关的获取影响,然后应用 Levesque 及其同事的 "以患者为中心的医疗保健获取 "框架来解释研究结果。研究结果参与者描述了增强和减少获取的服务变化,包括重新部署、外联、虚拟护理、停止某些服务和开始新的服务,以及新的风险管理战略。其中一些暗示了对公平的具体影响。虚拟医疗和外联活动为以前可能得不到充分服务的患者群体创造了就医机会,而虚拟医疗、重新部署和新的风险管理活动则造成了新的就医障碍和不公平,使一些患者完全无法获得医疗服务。结论:继续开展外展活动、加强团队合作、深思熟虑地整合虚拟医疗,可以改善综合初级医疗服务的可及性。在初级医疗部门努力从大流行病的影响中恢复并满足人口健康需求的过程中,在重新设计实践过程中应用以患者为中心的就医框架为加强服务提供了一种有意义的方法。
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