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Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study

West Virginia (WV) has the highest rates of obesity and cardiopulmonary disease in the United States (U.S.). Recent work has identified a significant care gap in WV for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). This OSA care gap likely has significant health implications for the region given the high rates of...

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Autores principales: Stansbury, Robert, Rudisill, Toni, Salyer, Rachel, Kirk, Brenna, De Fazio, Caterina, Baus, Adam, Aryal, Shubekchha, Strollo, Patrick J., Sharma, Sunil, Feinberg, Judith
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9369967/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35956065
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11154449
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author Stansbury, Robert
Rudisill, Toni
Salyer, Rachel
Kirk, Brenna
De Fazio, Caterina
Baus, Adam
Aryal, Shubekchha
Strollo, Patrick J.
Sharma, Sunil
Feinberg, Judith
author_facet Stansbury, Robert
Rudisill, Toni
Salyer, Rachel
Kirk, Brenna
De Fazio, Caterina
Baus, Adam
Aryal, Shubekchha
Strollo, Patrick J.
Sharma, Sunil
Feinberg, Judith
author_sort Stansbury, Robert
collection PubMed
description West Virginia (WV) has the highest rates of obesity and cardiopulmonary disease in the United States (U.S.). Recent work has identified a significant care gap in WV for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). This OSA care gap likely has significant health implications for the region given the high rates of obesity and cardiopulmonary disease. The purpose of this mix methods study was to identify barriers that contribute to the rural OSA care disparity previously identified in WV. Methods: This study used mixed methods to evaluate the barriers and facilitators to management of OSA at Federally Qualified Health Centers serving communities in southern WV. Focus groups were conducted at federally qualified health centers with providers serving Appalachian communities. Participants also completed the validated Obstructive Sleep Apnea Knowledge and Attitudes (OSAKA) questionnaire to gain insight into provider knowledge and beliefs regarding OSA. EMR analysis using diagnostic codes was completed at the sites to assess OSA prevalence rates. The same individual served as the interviewer in all focus group sessions to minimize interviewer variability/bias. Our team checked to ensure that the professional transcriptions were correct and matched the audio via spot checks. Results: Themes identified from the focus groups fell into three broad categories: (1) barriers to OSA care delivery, (2) facilitators to OSA care delivery, and (3) community-based care needs to optimize management of OSA in the targeted rural areas. Questionnaire data demonstrated rural providers feel OSA is an important condition to identify but lack confidence to identify and treat OSA. Evaluation of the electronic medical record demonstrates an even larger OSA care gap in these rural communities than previously described. Conclusion: This study found a lack of provider confidence in the ability to diagnose and treat OSA effectively and identified specific themes that limit OSA care in the communities studied. Training directed toward the identified knowledge gaps and on new technologies would likely give rural primary care providers the confidence to take a more active role in OSA diagnosis and management. An integrated model of care that incorporates primary care providers, specialists and effective use of modern technologies will be essential to address the identified OSA care disparities in rural WV and similar communities across the U.S. Community engaged research such as the current study will be essential to the creation of feasible, practical, relevant and culturally competent care pathways for providers serving rural communities with OSA and other respiratory disease to achieve health equity.
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spelling pubmed-93699672022-08-12 Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study Stansbury, Robert Rudisill, Toni Salyer, Rachel Kirk, Brenna De Fazio, Caterina Baus, Adam Aryal, Shubekchha Strollo, Patrick J. Sharma, Sunil Feinberg, Judith J Clin Med Article West Virginia (WV) has the highest rates of obesity and cardiopulmonary disease in the United States (U.S.). Recent work has identified a significant care gap in WV for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). This OSA care gap likely has significant health implications for the region given the high rates of obesity and cardiopulmonary disease. The purpose of this mix methods study was to identify barriers that contribute to the rural OSA care disparity previously identified in WV. Methods: This study used mixed methods to evaluate the barriers and facilitators to management of OSA at Federally Qualified Health Centers serving communities in southern WV. Focus groups were conducted at federally qualified health centers with providers serving Appalachian communities. Participants also completed the validated Obstructive Sleep Apnea Knowledge and Attitudes (OSAKA) questionnaire to gain insight into provider knowledge and beliefs regarding OSA. EMR analysis using diagnostic codes was completed at the sites to assess OSA prevalence rates. The same individual served as the interviewer in all focus group sessions to minimize interviewer variability/bias. Our team checked to ensure that the professional transcriptions were correct and matched the audio via spot checks. Results: Themes identified from the focus groups fell into three broad categories: (1) barriers to OSA care delivery, (2) facilitators to OSA care delivery, and (3) community-based care needs to optimize management of OSA in the targeted rural areas. Questionnaire data demonstrated rural providers feel OSA is an important condition to identify but lack confidence to identify and treat OSA. Evaluation of the electronic medical record demonstrates an even larger OSA care gap in these rural communities than previously described. Conclusion: This study found a lack of provider confidence in the ability to diagnose and treat OSA effectively and identified specific themes that limit OSA care in the communities studied. Training directed toward the identified knowledge gaps and on new technologies would likely give rural primary care providers the confidence to take a more active role in OSA diagnosis and management. An integrated model of care that incorporates primary care providers, specialists and effective use of modern technologies will be essential to address the identified OSA care disparities in rural WV and similar communities across the U.S. Community engaged research such as the current study will be essential to the creation of feasible, practical, relevant and culturally competent care pathways for providers serving rural communities with OSA and other respiratory disease to achieve health equity. MDPI 2022-07-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9369967/ /pubmed/35956065 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11154449 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Stansbury, Robert
Rudisill, Toni
Salyer, Rachel
Kirk, Brenna
De Fazio, Caterina
Baus, Adam
Aryal, Shubekchha
Strollo, Patrick J.
Sharma, Sunil
Feinberg, Judith
Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study
title Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study
title_full Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study
title_fullStr Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study
title_full_unstemmed Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study
title_short Provider Perspectives on Sleep Apnea from Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Study
title_sort provider perspectives on sleep apnea from appalachia: a mixed methods study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9369967/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35956065
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11154449
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