A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults

Abstract Background Uninsured and underinsured patients face specialty care access disparities that prevent them from obtaining the care they need and negatively impact their health and well-being. We aimed to understand how making specialty care electronic consultations (eConsults) available at a m...

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Main Authors: Lauren Bifulco, Lynsey Grzejszczak, Idiana Velez, Tracy Angelocci, Daren Anderson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2023-10-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-10086-6
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author Lauren Bifulco
Lynsey Grzejszczak
Idiana Velez
Tracy Angelocci
Daren Anderson
author_facet Lauren Bifulco
Lynsey Grzejszczak
Idiana Velez
Tracy Angelocci
Daren Anderson
author_sort Lauren Bifulco
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Uninsured and underinsured patients face specialty care access disparities that prevent them from obtaining the care they need and negatively impact their health and well-being. We aimed to understand how making specialty care electronic consultations (eConsults) available at a multi-site Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) in central Texas affected uninsured patients’ care-seeking experiences and impacted their ability to receive the needed care. Methods We used concepts from Ecological Systems Theory to examine individual, interpersonal, organization-level, social, and health policy environment factors that impacted patients’ access to specialty care and the use of eConsults. We conducted thematic analysis of semi-structured, qualitative interviews with patients about seeking specialty care while uninsured and with uninsured patients and FQHC PCPs about their experience using eConsults to obtain specialists’ recommendations. Results Patients and PCPs identified out-of-pocket cost, stigma, a paucity of local specialists willing to see uninsured patients, time and difficulty associated with travel and transportation to specialty visits, and health policy limitations as barriers to obtaining specialty care. Benefits of using eConsults for uninsured patients included minimizing/avoiding financial stress, expanding access to care, expanding scope of primary care, and expediting access to specialists. Concerns about the model included patients’ limited understanding of eConsults, concern about cost, and worry whether eConsults could appropriately meet their specialty needs. Conclusions Findings suggest that eConsults delivered in a primary care FQHC addressed uninsured patients’ specialty care access concerns. They helped to address financial and geographic barriers, provided time and cost savings to patients, expanded FQHC PCPs’ knowledge and care provision options, and allowed patients to receive more care in primary care.
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spelling doaj.art-4941c504efc948229db0049e3ba2a80a2023-11-26T12:43:28ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632023-10-0123111110.1186/s12913-023-10086-6A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsultsLauren Bifulco0Lynsey Grzejszczak1Idiana Velez2Tracy Angelocci3Daren Anderson4Weitzman InstituteWeitzman InstituteWeitzman InstituteLone Star Circle of CareWeitzman InstituteAbstract Background Uninsured and underinsured patients face specialty care access disparities that prevent them from obtaining the care they need and negatively impact their health and well-being. We aimed to understand how making specialty care electronic consultations (eConsults) available at a multi-site Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) in central Texas affected uninsured patients’ care-seeking experiences and impacted their ability to receive the needed care. Methods We used concepts from Ecological Systems Theory to examine individual, interpersonal, organization-level, social, and health policy environment factors that impacted patients’ access to specialty care and the use of eConsults. We conducted thematic analysis of semi-structured, qualitative interviews with patients about seeking specialty care while uninsured and with uninsured patients and FQHC PCPs about their experience using eConsults to obtain specialists’ recommendations. Results Patients and PCPs identified out-of-pocket cost, stigma, a paucity of local specialists willing to see uninsured patients, time and difficulty associated with travel and transportation to specialty visits, and health policy limitations as barriers to obtaining specialty care. Benefits of using eConsults for uninsured patients included minimizing/avoiding financial stress, expanding access to care, expanding scope of primary care, and expediting access to specialists. Concerns about the model included patients’ limited understanding of eConsults, concern about cost, and worry whether eConsults could appropriately meet their specialty needs. Conclusions Findings suggest that eConsults delivered in a primary care FQHC addressed uninsured patients’ specialty care access concerns. They helped to address financial and geographic barriers, provided time and cost savings to patients, expanded FQHC PCPs’ knowledge and care provision options, and allowed patients to receive more care in primary care.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-10086-6Access to CareHealth DisparitiesPatient perspectivesProvider perspectivesPrimary careeConsults
spellingShingle Lauren Bifulco
Lynsey Grzejszczak
Idiana Velez
Tracy Angelocci
Daren Anderson
A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults
BMC Health Services Research
Access to Care
Health Disparities
Patient perspectives
Provider perspectives
Primary care
eConsults
title A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults
title_full A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults
title_fullStr A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults
title_short A qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care eConsults
title_sort qualitative investigation of uninsured patient and primary care provider perspectives on specialty care econsults
topic Access to Care
Health Disparities
Patient perspectives
Provider perspectives
Primary care
eConsults
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-10086-6
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