Telephone, video, equity and access in virtual care
Tyla Thomas-Jacques, Trevor Jamieson, James Shaw
Abstract
Current public health measures catalyzed a large shift to virtual care, resulting in a great uptake in telephone and video-enabled care. While pre-pandemic public healthcare funding rarely covered the telephone as a reimbursable care delivery model, it has proven a crucial offering for many populations. As the new standard of virtual service delivery is being solidified, simple technological solutions that provide access to care must continue to be supported. This paper explores an important consequence of relying on complex technologies as the new standard of virtual care: the risk of exacerbating health disparities by enabling a deeper digital divide for marginalized populations.
Topics & Concepts
Equity (law)Health careTelehealthVideoconferencingBusinessPandemicService delivery frameworkInternet privacyService (business)TelemedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Public relationsTelecommunicationsComputer scienceMedicinePolitical scienceMarketingEconomic growthEconomicsPathologyLawInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseTelemedicine and Telehealth ImplementationMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsHealthcare Systems and Technology