Unveiling Preferences in Closed Communities: Development of a Discrete Choice Experiment (DCE) Questionnaire to Elicit Ultra-Orthodox Women Preferences for Video Consultations in Primary Care.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Patient-Patient Centered Outcomes Research Pub Date : 2025-03-11 DOI:10.1007/s40271-025-00734-w
Irit Chudner, Anat Drach-Zahavy, Batya Madjar, Leah Gelman, Sonia Habib
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Abstract

Background: Video consultations in primary care settings demonstrate substantial benefits, including improved accessibility, reduced waiting times, and enhanced health management. These services could particularly benefit ultra-Orthodox women in Israel, who typically manage large families and face unique healthcare access challenges as primary caregivers. However, eliciting preferences within this closed religious community presents distinct methodological challenges because of cultural sensitivities and religious restrictions regarding technology use.

Objective: We aimed to develop and validate a culturally sensitive, discrete choice experiment questionnaire for eliciting ultra-Orthodox women's preferences regarding video versus in-clinic consultations in primary care settings.

Methods: A three-stage mixed-methods approach was employed: (1) 33 semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders (women, men, rabbis, and healthcare providers) to identify attributes and levels; (2) an attribute-ranking exercise with 88 ultra-Orthodox women to refine attributes; and (3) cognitive interviews with 15 women to validate the discrete choice experiment questionnaire.

Results: Four key attributes emerged as most important for ultra-Orthodox women when choosing between video and in-clinic consultations: (1) consultation timing (regular hours/after 20:00); (2) travel time; (3) waiting time; and (4) familiarity with the healthcare provider. Importantly, the study revealed the necessity for a dedicated device exclusively for healthcare provider communication, closed to open Internet networks, as a fundamental prerequisite for implementing video consultations in this community. Additional unique findings emerged through this methodological process, contributing to the understanding of technological adoption in closed religious patients' communities.

Conclusions: This study provides a comprehensive example of implementing pre-discrete choice experiment stages while addressing unique considerations of a special population. The findings provide a framework for developing inclusive telemedicine services for traditionally underserved populations.

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背景:初级医疗机构的视频会诊显示出巨大的益处,包括提高了可及性、减少了等待时间并加强了健康管理。这些服务尤其能使以色列的极端东正教妇女受益,因为她们通常管理着庞大的家庭,作为主要照顾者面临着独特的医疗服务挑战。然而,由于文化敏感性和对技术使用的宗教限制,在这一封闭的宗教社区内征询偏好在方法上面临着独特的挑战:我们旨在开发并验证一种文化敏感的离散选择实验问卷,以了解极端东正教妇女对初级医疗机构中视频咨询与门诊咨询的偏好:采用了三阶段混合方法:(1) 对主要利益相关者(女性、男性、拉比和医疗服务提供者)进行 33 次半结构式访谈,以确定属性和水平;(2) 对 88 名极端东正教妇女进行属性排序,以完善属性;(3) 对 15 名妇女进行认知访谈,以验证离散选择实验问卷:对极端东正教妇女而言,在选择视频咨询还是门诊咨询时,四个关键属性最为重要:(1) 咨询时间(正常时间/20:00 之后);(2) 旅行时间;(3) 等待时间;(4) 对医疗服务提供者的熟悉程度。重要的是,该研究表明,在该社区实施视频会诊的基本前提是必须有一个专门用于医疗服务提供者通信的专用设备,且该设备不得接入开放的互联网网络。在这一方法论过程中还出现了其他独特的发现,有助于了解在封闭的宗教病人社区采用技术的情况:本研究为实施离散选择实验前阶段提供了一个全面的范例,同时解决了特殊人群的独特问题。研究结果为为传统上服务不足的人群开发包容性远程医疗服务提供了一个框架。
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来源期刊
Patient-Patient Centered Outcomes Research
Patient-Patient Centered Outcomes Research HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
8.30%
发文量
44
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Patient provides a venue for scientifically rigorous, timely, and relevant research to promote the development, evaluation and implementation of therapies, technologies, and innovations that will enhance the patient experience. It is an international forum for research that advances and/or applies qualitative or quantitative methods to promote the generation, synthesis, or interpretation of evidence. The journal has specific interest in receiving original research, reviews and commentaries related to qualitative and mixed methods research, stated-preference methods, patient reported outcomes, and shared decision making. Advances in regulatory science, patient-focused drug development, patient-centered benefit-risk and health technology assessment will also be considered. Additional digital features (including animated abstracts, video abstracts, slide decks, audio slides, instructional videos, infographics, podcasts and animations) can be published with articles; these are designed to increase the visibility, readership and educational value of the journal’s content. In addition, articles published in The Patient may be accompanied by plain language summaries to assist readers who have some knowledge of, but not in-depth expertise in, the area to understand important medical advances. All manuscripts are subject to peer review by international experts.
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