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Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity

Achieving health equity (where every person has the opportunity to attain their full health potential) requires the removal of obstacles to health, including barriers to high-quality medical care. Innovations in service delivery can inadvertently maintain, worsen, or introduce inequities. As such, i...

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Autores principales: Szymczak, Julia E., Fiks, Alexander G., Craig, Sansanee, Mendez, Dara D., Ray, Kristin N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9831366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36627525
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07987-3
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author Szymczak, Julia E.
Fiks, Alexander G.
Craig, Sansanee
Mendez, Dara D.
Ray, Kristin N.
author_facet Szymczak, Julia E.
Fiks, Alexander G.
Craig, Sansanee
Mendez, Dara D.
Ray, Kristin N.
author_sort Szymczak, Julia E.
collection PubMed
description Achieving health equity (where every person has the opportunity to attain their full health potential) requires the removal of obstacles to health, including barriers to high-quality medical care. Innovations in service delivery can inadvertently maintain, worsen, or introduce inequities. As such, implementation of innovations must be accompanied by a dual commitment to evaluate impact on marginalized groups and to restructure systems that obstruct people from health and healthcare. Understanding the impact innovations have on access to high-quality care is central to this effort. In this Perspective, we join conceptual models of healthcare access and quality with health equity frameworks to conceptualize healthcare receipt as a series of interactions between people and systems unfolding over time. This synthesized model is applied to illustrate the effects of telemedicine on patient, population, and system outcomes. Telemedicine may improve or worsen health equity by altering access to care and by altering quality of care once it is accessed. Teasing out these varied effects is complex and requires considering multilevel influences on the outcome of a care-seeking episode. This synthesized model can be used to inform research, practice, and policy surrounding the equity implications of care delivery innovations more broadly.
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spelling pubmed-98313662023-01-11 Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity Szymczak, Julia E. Fiks, Alexander G. Craig, Sansanee Mendez, Dara D. Ray, Kristin N. J Gen Intern Med Perspective Achieving health equity (where every person has the opportunity to attain their full health potential) requires the removal of obstacles to health, including barriers to high-quality medical care. Innovations in service delivery can inadvertently maintain, worsen, or introduce inequities. As such, implementation of innovations must be accompanied by a dual commitment to evaluate impact on marginalized groups and to restructure systems that obstruct people from health and healthcare. Understanding the impact innovations have on access to high-quality care is central to this effort. In this Perspective, we join conceptual models of healthcare access and quality with health equity frameworks to conceptualize healthcare receipt as a series of interactions between people and systems unfolding over time. This synthesized model is applied to illustrate the effects of telemedicine on patient, population, and system outcomes. Telemedicine may improve or worsen health equity by altering access to care and by altering quality of care once it is accessed. Teasing out these varied effects is complex and requires considering multilevel influences on the outcome of a care-seeking episode. This synthesized model can be used to inform research, practice, and policy surrounding the equity implications of care delivery innovations more broadly. Springer International Publishing 2023-01-10 2023-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9831366/ /pubmed/36627525 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07987-3 Text en © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine 2022
spellingShingle Perspective
Szymczak, Julia E.
Fiks, Alexander G.
Craig, Sansanee
Mendez, Dara D.
Ray, Kristin N.
Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity
title Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity
title_full Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity
title_fullStr Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity
title_full_unstemmed Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity
title_short Access to What for Whom? How Care Delivery Innovations Impact Health Equity
title_sort access to what for whom? how care delivery innovations impact health equity
topic Perspective
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9831366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36627525
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07987-3
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