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A Telehealth Initiative to Overcome Health Care Barriers for People Experiencing Homelessness
Author(s) -
Cristin Swords Adams,
Marty S. Player,
Carole Berini,
Suzanne Perkins,
Jerome Fay,
Layne Walker,
Echo Buffalo,
Chelsea Roach,
Vanessa Diaz
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
telemedicine and e-health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.951
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1556-3669
pISSN - 1530-5627
DOI - 10.1089/tmj.2021.0127
Subject(s) - telehealth , medicine , vulnerability (computing) , health care , telemedicine , mental health , emergency department , nursing , family medicine , medical emergency , psychiatry , political science , computer security , computer science , law
People experiencing homelessness (PEH) encounter barriers to health care, increasing their vulnerability to illness, hospitalization, and death. Telehealth can improve access to health care, but its use in PEH has been insufficiently evaluated. Needs assessment surveys completed by clients at an urban drop-in center for PEH ( n  = 63) showed mental (58.7%) and physical (52.4%) health challenges were common, as was emergency department (ED) use (75.9%, n  = 54). Surveys collected after in-person and telehealth clinical visits showed patient satisfaction was >90% for both visit types ( n  = 125, 44.0% telehealth and 56.0% in person). Without access to telehealth visits, 29.1% of patients would have gone to the ED and 38.2% would not have gotten care. Providers ( n  = 93, 69.6% telehealth and 30.4% in person) were more likely to agree/strongly agree they made a positive impact on patients' health through telehealth (92.2%) than in person (71.4%) ( p  = 0.019). Telehealth is a feasible and potentially cost-effective method to increase access to health care and reduce health outcome disparities in PEH.

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