医护人员对满足急诊科患者健康公平需求的处方电话计划的看法:一项定性研究。

IF 2.4 CJEM Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1007/s43678-024-00735-y
Kathryn Hodwitz, Galo F Ginocchio, Tali Fedorovsky, Hannah Girdler, Brielle Bossin, Clara Juando-Prats, Evelyn Dell, Andrea Somers, Jennifer Hulme
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目标:无家可归和被边缘化的人在获得医疗保健服务方面面临着巨大障碍。医疗保健领域对技术的日益依赖加剧了这些不平等现象。我们对一项基于医院的处方电话计划进行了评估,该计划旨在减少数字健康不平等现象,改善急诊科边缘化患者获得服务的机会。我们研究了该计划的感知结果以及影响结果的背景障碍和促进因素:我们在安大略省多伦多市的两家城市学术医院开展了一项建构主义定性项目评估。我们对 12 名医护人员进行了访谈,了解他们对项目实施和成果的看法,并采用反思性主题分析法对访谈数据进行了分析:我们的分析得出了五项相互关联的项目成果:与患者建立信任、促进医疗保健的独立性、沟通医疗保健部门、为边缘化人群提供公平的医疗保健服务以及减轻医护人员的道德压力。与会者表示,提供电话服务对于充分服务那些在获取医疗和社会服务方面面临障碍的患者以及支持那些往往缺乏资源来充分服务这些患者的医疗工作者至关重要。我们确定了可能影响计划成果和未来实施工作的关键环境因素和挑战:我们的研究结果表明,为边缘化患者群体提供电话可解决数字和社会健康不平等问题;然而,与患者建立互信关系、了解这些群体的独特需求以及在生物心理社会健康模式下运作是计划成功的关键。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Healthcare workers' perspectives on a prescription phone program to meet the health equity needs of patients in the emergency department: a qualitative study.

Objectives: People experiencing homelessness and marginalization face considerable barriers to accessing healthcare services. Increased reliance on technology within healthcare has exacerbated these inequities. We evaluated a hospital-based prescription phone program aimed to reduce digital health inequities and improve access to services among marginalized patients in Emergency Departments. We examined the perceived outcomes of the program and the contextual barriers and facilitators affecting outcomes.

Methods: We conducted a constructivist qualitative program evaluation at two urban, academic hospitals in Toronto, Ontario. We interviewed 12 healthcare workers about their perspectives on program implementation and outcomes and analyzed the interview data using reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: Our analyses generated five interrelated program outcomes: building trust with patients, facilitating independence in healthcare, bridging sectors of care, enabling equitable care for marginalized populations, and mitigating moral distress among healthcare workers. Participants expressed that phone provision is critical for adequately serving patients who face barriers to accessing health and social services, and for supporting healthcare workers who often lack resources to adequately serve these patients. We identified key contextual enablers and challenges that may influence program outcomes and future implementation efforts.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that providing phones to marginalized patient populations may address digital and social health inequities; however, building trusting relationships with patients, understanding the unique needs of these populations, and operating within a biopsychosocial model of health are key to program success.

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