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Impact of COVID-19 on patient and healthcare professional attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors toward the healthcare system and on the dynamics of the healthcare pathway

Katarzyna Bernacki, Angie Keister, Nadia Sapiro, Jin Joo, Lisa Mattle

2021BMC Health Services Research56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: COVID-19 has dramatically changed how healthcare is delivered and experienced. METHODS: One-on-one interviews and a virtual ethnographic roundtable were conducted among 45 patients, caregivers, and healthcare professionals (HCPs) in 4 therapeutic areas from the United States and Japan: overactive bladder, vasomotor symptoms, prostate cancer, and metastatic urothelial carcinoma. The goal was to identify the impact of COVID-19 on patient/caregiver and HCP attitudes, interactions, beliefs, and behaviors toward the healthcare system and care pathway. RESULTS: Four foundational themes were identified: 1) COVID-19 risk is relative; 2) isolation is collateral damage; 3) telehealth is a parallel universe; and 4) COVID-19 is destabilizing the foundations of healthcare. Numerous insights, influenced by diverse cultural, social, and psychological factors, were identified within each theme. CONCLUSIONS: The impacts of COVID-19 were noticeable at multiple points of care during the "universal" care pathway, including at initial screening, referral to specialists, diagnosis, treatment initiation/surgery, and during ongoing care. Greater appreciation of the short- and long-term impacts of COVID-19 and resulting gaps in care may act as a catalyst for positive change in future patient care.

Topics & Concepts

Health careMedicineHealth administrationNursing researchNursingHealth informaticsReferralFamily medicinePublic healthEconomic growthEconomicsCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsCOVID-19 and Mental HealthCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies