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93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations

BACKGROUND: Low-income and racially diverse populations often have multiple barriers in accessing healthcare and are at increased risk of poor health outcomes. COVID-19 exacerbated these health inequities: decreased in-person appointments, difficult access to virtual care and deprioritization of ele...

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Autores principales: Nguyen, Anne Xuan-Lan, Kevorkov, Alexander, Li, Patricia, Benkelfat, Rislaine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9586051/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pch/pxac100.092
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author Nguyen, Anne Xuan-Lan
Kevorkov, Alexander
Li, Patricia
Benkelfat, Rislaine
author_facet Nguyen, Anne Xuan-Lan
Kevorkov, Alexander
Li, Patricia
Benkelfat, Rislaine
author_sort Nguyen, Anne Xuan-Lan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Low-income and racially diverse populations often have multiple barriers in accessing healthcare and are at increased risk of poor health outcomes. COVID-19 exacerbated these health inequities: decreased in-person appointments, difficult access to virtual care and deprioritization of elective clinical activity led to delays in well-child visits and vaccination. This public health emergency highlighted a need to develop alternative models to enable access to primary care for vulnerable children. While mobile clinics are well-established in the United States, little is known about them in Canada. OBJECTIVES: This study aims to characterize Canadian mobile clinics providing primary care health services to vulnerable populations, including children, and seeks to inform the implementation of a pediatric mobile clinic under development. DESIGN/METHODS: This environmental scan screened scientific databases and the grey literature using a combination of terms designating mobile health clinics and Canadian locations. Relevant Canadian primary care mobile clinic initiatives were subsequently included. We defined primary care mobile clinics as movable health care units providing primary healthcare services delivered by general medical practitioners (pediatricians and family physicians). Examples of excluded initiatives were mobile clinics focused on education/literacy, dental care, vision care, endocrinology, cancer screening, safe injection sites, vaccination, physical rehabilitation and urgent care. Descriptive statistics and qualitative analysis were performed. RESULTS: 29 clinics were identified, of which 26 are still active. Most clinics were located in Ontario (n=11), followed by British Columbia (n=8), Alberta (n=5), Quebec (n=2) and the Maritimes (n=2). The first mobile clinic in Canada was launched in 1996, with an increasing number of new clinics in 2021. While all clinics served vulnerable populations, some targeted specific groups, such as children, people experiencing homelessness, immigrants, LGBTQ+ individuals and Indigenous peoples. We identified three pediatric mobile clinics, two of which targeted teenagers. Onboard the clinics, physicians often worked with nurses, outreach workers and social workers. These professionals provided primary care services, as well as healthcare navigation, sexual education, mental health care, harm reduction supplies, vaccination and emergency care. All mobile clinics partnered with their local government, charities or businesses to fund their initiative. CONCLUSION: Mobile health clinics are a growing model of primary care in Canada. They are the result of a multidisciplinary collaboration between healthcare providers, social workers and outreach workers. To this date, Canadian pediatric mobile clinics remain a handful and represent an interesting avenue to address health inequities in children, during the pandemic and beyond. [Image: see text] [Image: see text]
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spelling pubmed-95860512022-11-04 93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations Nguyen, Anne Xuan-Lan Kevorkov, Alexander Li, Patricia Benkelfat, Rislaine Paediatr Child Health Abstract / Résumés BACKGROUND: Low-income and racially diverse populations often have multiple barriers in accessing healthcare and are at increased risk of poor health outcomes. COVID-19 exacerbated these health inequities: decreased in-person appointments, difficult access to virtual care and deprioritization of elective clinical activity led to delays in well-child visits and vaccination. This public health emergency highlighted a need to develop alternative models to enable access to primary care for vulnerable children. While mobile clinics are well-established in the United States, little is known about them in Canada. OBJECTIVES: This study aims to characterize Canadian mobile clinics providing primary care health services to vulnerable populations, including children, and seeks to inform the implementation of a pediatric mobile clinic under development. DESIGN/METHODS: This environmental scan screened scientific databases and the grey literature using a combination of terms designating mobile health clinics and Canadian locations. Relevant Canadian primary care mobile clinic initiatives were subsequently included. We defined primary care mobile clinics as movable health care units providing primary healthcare services delivered by general medical practitioners (pediatricians and family physicians). Examples of excluded initiatives were mobile clinics focused on education/literacy, dental care, vision care, endocrinology, cancer screening, safe injection sites, vaccination, physical rehabilitation and urgent care. Descriptive statistics and qualitative analysis were performed. RESULTS: 29 clinics were identified, of which 26 are still active. Most clinics were located in Ontario (n=11), followed by British Columbia (n=8), Alberta (n=5), Quebec (n=2) and the Maritimes (n=2). The first mobile clinic in Canada was launched in 1996, with an increasing number of new clinics in 2021. While all clinics served vulnerable populations, some targeted specific groups, such as children, people experiencing homelessness, immigrants, LGBTQ+ individuals and Indigenous peoples. We identified three pediatric mobile clinics, two of which targeted teenagers. Onboard the clinics, physicians often worked with nurses, outreach workers and social workers. These professionals provided primary care services, as well as healthcare navigation, sexual education, mental health care, harm reduction supplies, vaccination and emergency care. All mobile clinics partnered with their local government, charities or businesses to fund their initiative. CONCLUSION: Mobile health clinics are a growing model of primary care in Canada. They are the result of a multidisciplinary collaboration between healthcare providers, social workers and outreach workers. To this date, Canadian pediatric mobile clinics remain a handful and represent an interesting avenue to address health inequities in children, during the pandemic and beyond. [Image: see text] [Image: see text] Oxford University Press 2022-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9586051/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pch/pxac100.092 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Canadian Paediatric Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com https://academic.oup.com/pages/standard-publication-reuse-rightsThis article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic.oup.com/pages/standard-publication-reuse-rights)
spellingShingle Abstract / Résumés
Nguyen, Anne Xuan-Lan
Kevorkov, Alexander
Li, Patricia
Benkelfat, Rislaine
93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations
title 93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations
title_full 93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations
title_fullStr 93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations
title_full_unstemmed 93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations
title_short 93 Mapping Mobile Health Clinics in Canada: Delivering Equitable Primary Care to Children and Vulnerable Populations
title_sort 93 mapping mobile health clinics in canada: delivering equitable primary care to children and vulnerable populations
topic Abstract / Résumés
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9586051/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pch/pxac100.092
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