优化数字疼痛自我报告工具对健康公平影响的策略:一系列多方利益相关者焦点小组。

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Journal for Equity in Health Pub Date : 2024-11-11 DOI:10.1186/s12939-024-02299-w
Syed Mustafa Ali, Amanda Gambin, Helen Chadwick, William G Dixon, Allison Crawford, Sabine N Van der Veer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在不同人群中,慢性疼痛的发病率和分布以及疼痛管理服务的获取和结果都存在可避免的差异(即不公平)。数字疼痛自我报告工具有可能减少或加剧这些不平等现象。本研究旨在更好地了解如何优化数字疼痛自我报告工具对正在经历(或有可能经历)数字疼痛不平等的人群的健康公平影响:这是一项定性研究,以健康公平影响评估工具--数字健康补充(HEIA-DH)为指导。我们与多个利益相关者开展了三个范围界定焦点小组,以确定数字疼痛自我报告工具的潜在影响以及管理这些影响的策略。每个小组重点关注一个经历数字疼痛不平等的优先群体,包括老年人、少数民族和社会经济贫困地区的居民。组织了第四个共识焦点小组,以讨论和选择影响管理策略。我们对焦点小组进行了录音、逐字记录,并采用框架法进行了分析。我们从 HEIA-DH 中提取代码,将其归入四个预定义类别,并用参与者的引语加以说明:共有 15 名肌肉骨骼疼痛患者和 13 名专业人员参与了此次研究。参与者描述了数字化疼痛自我报告如何通过更好地捕捉疼痛波动和丰富患者与医护人员之间的交流来对健康公平产生积极影响,进而加强临床决策和自我管理实践。相反,与会者指出,对疼痛报告的错误解读、缺乏疼痛术语知识、数字(如无法使用技术)和社会(如性别成见)排斥可能会对人们的健康公平产生负面影响。与会者提出了 32 项策略,其中 20 项被认为有可能减轻这些对健康公平的负面影响。策略范例包括:根据用户的个人偏好定制自我报告工具,或提供资源更好地解释如何使用自我报告的疼痛数据以建立信任:与人们的个人和社会特征相关联,在开发可访问的数字疼痛自我报告工具时需要考虑公平性问题,还需要提供资源和技能,以便优先群体能够采纳和使用这些工具。未来的研究应侧重于实施我们的研究确定的这些基于公平的考虑因素或策略,并监测它们对慢性疼痛患者健康公平的影响。
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Strategies to optimise the health equity impact of digital pain self-reporting tools: a series of multi-stakeholder focus groups.

Background: There are avoidable differences (i.e., inequities) in the prevalence and distribution of chronic pain across diverse populations, as well as in access to and outcomes of pain management services. Digital pain self-reporting tools have the potential to reduce or exacerbate these inequities. This study aimed to better understand how to optimise the health equity impact of digital pain self-reporting tools on people who are experiencing (or are at risk of) digital pain inequities.

Methods: This was a qualitative study, guided by the Health Equity Impact Assessment tool-digital health supplement (HEIA-DH). We conducted three scoping focus groups with multiple stakeholders to identify the potential impacts of digital pain self-reporting tools and strategies to manage these impacts. Each group focused on one priority group experiencing digital pain inequities, including older adults, ethnic minorities, and people living in socio-economically deprived areas. A fourth consensus focus group was organised to discuss and select impact management strategies. Focus groups were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using a framework approach. We derived codes, grouped them under four pre-defined categories from the HEIA-DH, and illustrated them with participants' quotes.

Results: A total of fifteen people living with musculoskeletal pain conditions and thirteen professionals took part. Participants described how digital pain self-reports can have a positive health equity impact by better capturing pain fluctuations and enriching patient-provider communication, which in turn can enhance clinical decisions and self-management practices. Conversely, participants identified that incorrect interpretation of pain reports, lack of knowledge of pain terminologies, and digital (e.g., no access to technology) and social (e.g., gender stereotyping) exclusions may negatively impact on people's health equity. The participants identified 32 strategies, of which 20 were selected as being likely to mitigate these negative health equity impacts. Example strategies included, e.g., option to customise self-reporting tools in line with users' personal preferences, or resources to better explain how self-reported pain data will be used to build trust.

Conclusion: Linked to people's personal and social characteristics, there are equity-based considerations for developing accessible digital pain self-reporting tools, as well as resources and skills to enable the adoption and use of these tools among priority groups. Future research should focus on implementing these equity-based considerations or strategies identified by our study and monitoring their impact on the health equity of people living with chronic pain.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
期刊最新文献
Layers of inequality: gender, medicalisation and obstetric violence in Ghana. "They pulled that funding away and we're not recovering. it's getting worse": deaths of despair in post-austerity north east England. A hill tribe community advisory board in Northern Thailand: lessons learned one year on. Unpacking occupational and sex divides to understand the moderate progress in life expectancy in recent years (France, 2010's). Correction: Making health inequality analysis accessible: WHO tools and resources using Microsoft Excel.
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