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Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations

INTRODUCTION: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare centers quickly adapted services into virtual formats. Pain clinics in Canada play a vital role in helping people living with pain, and these clinics remained essential services for patients throughout the pandemic. This study aimed to (1) descr...

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Autores principales: Borg Debono, Victoria, Neumark, Samuel, Buckley, Norman, Zacharias, Ramesh, Hapidou, Eleni, Anthonypillai, Jennifer, Faria, Susy, Meyer, Carrie-Lynn, Carter, Thomas, Parker, Nadia, Lau, Brenda, Abreu, Emmanuel, Duggan, Scott, Bisson, Etienne, Pierre, Josie, Visca, Regina, Poulin, Patricia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10085656/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37051562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/6603625
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author Borg Debono, Victoria
Neumark, Samuel
Buckley, Norman
Zacharias, Ramesh
Hapidou, Eleni
Anthonypillai, Jennifer
Faria, Susy
Meyer, Carrie-Lynn
Carter, Thomas
Parker, Nadia
Lau, Brenda
Abreu, Emmanuel
Duggan, Scott
Bisson, Etienne
Pierre, Josie
Visca, Regina
Poulin, Patricia
author_facet Borg Debono, Victoria
Neumark, Samuel
Buckley, Norman
Zacharias, Ramesh
Hapidou, Eleni
Anthonypillai, Jennifer
Faria, Susy
Meyer, Carrie-Lynn
Carter, Thomas
Parker, Nadia
Lau, Brenda
Abreu, Emmanuel
Duggan, Scott
Bisson, Etienne
Pierre, Josie
Visca, Regina
Poulin, Patricia
author_sort Borg Debono, Victoria
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare centers quickly adapted services into virtual formats. Pain clinics in Canada play a vital role in helping people living with pain, and these clinics remained essential services for patients throughout the pandemic. This study aimed to (1) describe and compare the transition from in-person to virtual pain care services at Canadian pain clinics during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) provide postpandemic recommendations for pain care services to optimize the quality of patient care. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used a qualitative participatory action study design that included a cross-sectional survey for data collection and descriptive analysis to summarize the findings. Survey responses were collected between January and March of 2021. The survey was administered to the leadership teams of 11 adult pain clinics affiliated with the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans. Responses were analyzed qualitatively to describe the transition to the virtual pain services at pain clinics. RESULTS: We achieved a 100% response rate from participating clinics. The results focus on describing the transition to the virtual care, current treatment and services, the quality of care, program sustainability, barriers to maintaining virtual services, and future considerations. CONCLUSIONS: Participating clinics were capable of transitioning pain care services to the virtual formats and have in-person care when needed with proper safety precautions. The pandemic demonstrated that it is feasible and sustainable for pain clinics to have a hybrid of virtual and in-person care to treat those living with pain. It is recommended that moving forward, there should be a hybrid of both virtual and in-person care for pain clinics. Ministries of Health should continue to develop policies and funding mechanisms that support innovations aimed at holistic healthcare, interdisciplinary teams, and the expansion of clinics' geographical reach for patient access.
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spelling pubmed-100856562023-04-11 Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations Borg Debono, Victoria Neumark, Samuel Buckley, Norman Zacharias, Ramesh Hapidou, Eleni Anthonypillai, Jennifer Faria, Susy Meyer, Carrie-Lynn Carter, Thomas Parker, Nadia Lau, Brenda Abreu, Emmanuel Duggan, Scott Bisson, Etienne Pierre, Josie Visca, Regina Poulin, Patricia Pain Res Manag Research Article INTRODUCTION: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare centers quickly adapted services into virtual formats. Pain clinics in Canada play a vital role in helping people living with pain, and these clinics remained essential services for patients throughout the pandemic. This study aimed to (1) describe and compare the transition from in-person to virtual pain care services at Canadian pain clinics during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) provide postpandemic recommendations for pain care services to optimize the quality of patient care. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used a qualitative participatory action study design that included a cross-sectional survey for data collection and descriptive analysis to summarize the findings. Survey responses were collected between January and March of 2021. The survey was administered to the leadership teams of 11 adult pain clinics affiliated with the Chronic Pain Centre of Excellence for Canadian Veterans. Responses were analyzed qualitatively to describe the transition to the virtual pain services at pain clinics. RESULTS: We achieved a 100% response rate from participating clinics. The results focus on describing the transition to the virtual care, current treatment and services, the quality of care, program sustainability, barriers to maintaining virtual services, and future considerations. CONCLUSIONS: Participating clinics were capable of transitioning pain care services to the virtual formats and have in-person care when needed with proper safety precautions. The pandemic demonstrated that it is feasible and sustainable for pain clinics to have a hybrid of virtual and in-person care to treat those living with pain. It is recommended that moving forward, there should be a hybrid of both virtual and in-person care for pain clinics. Ministries of Health should continue to develop policies and funding mechanisms that support innovations aimed at holistic healthcare, interdisciplinary teams, and the expansion of clinics' geographical reach for patient access. Hindawi 2023-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10085656/ /pubmed/37051562 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/6603625 Text en Copyright © 2023 Victoria Borg Debono et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Borg Debono, Victoria
Neumark, Samuel
Buckley, Norman
Zacharias, Ramesh
Hapidou, Eleni
Anthonypillai, Jennifer
Faria, Susy
Meyer, Carrie-Lynn
Carter, Thomas
Parker, Nadia
Lau, Brenda
Abreu, Emmanuel
Duggan, Scott
Bisson, Etienne
Pierre, Josie
Visca, Regina
Poulin, Patricia
Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations
title Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations
title_full Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations
title_fullStr Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations
title_full_unstemmed Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations
title_short Transition to Virtual Care Services during COVID-19 at Canadian Pain Clinics: Survey and Future Recommendations
title_sort transition to virtual care services during covid-19 at canadian pain clinics: survey and future recommendations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10085656/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37051562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/6603625
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