| Literature DB >> 35687411 |
Beza Merid1, Maria Cielito Robles2, Brahmajee K Nallamothu3, Mark W Newman4, Lesli E Skolarus2.
Abstract
Digital health interventions designed to promote health equity can be valuable tools in the delivery of health care to hardly served patient populations. But if the design of these technologies and the interventions in which they are deployed do not address the myriad structural barriers to care that minoritized patients, patients in rural areas, and patients who have trouble paying for care often face, their impact may be limited. Drawing on our mobile health (mHealth) research in the arena of cardiovascular care and blood pressure management, this viewpoint argues that health care providers and researchers should tend to structural barriers to care as a part of their digital health intervention design. Our 3-step predesign framework, informed by the Amplification Theory of Technology, offers a model that interventionists can follow to address these concerns. ©Beza Merid, Maria Cielito Robles, Brahmajee K Nallamothu, Mark W Newman, Lesli E Skolarus. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (https://mhealth.jmir.org), 10.06.2022.Entities:
Keywords: Amplification Theory of Technology; cardiovascular disease; digital health; high blood pressure; mHealth; racial health disparities; structural barriers to health
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35687411 PMCID: PMC9233258 DOI: 10.2196/31069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.947
The 3-step process applying the Amplification Theory in addressing structural barriers to health technology use.
| Steps | Sample questions | Examples of action |
| Step 1: Acknowledge the possibility of technology amplifying existing inequalities rather than transforming and immediately improving patient health |
Presuming access to a given technology, what do we know about users’ capability or opportunity to use the technology at the center of our intervention? Does any institutional capability to support this intervention already exist? |
Create a matrix documenting differential access or capability that may limit community partners’ use of technological intervention. Determine whether or not intervention relies on “myth of scale.” |
| Step 2: Name structural, environmental, and social barriers that may prevent use within specific communities and among specific users |
Is the mHealtha intervention we are deploying accessible, affordable, and safe to use within our partner community? What specific conditions may limit accessibility, affordability, and safety for users in this community? What are the health effects of policy decisions such as “digital redlining,” where internet service providers systematically exclude low-income neighborhoods from broadband access? |
Ask participants to identify environmental barriers to safe use of mHealth interventions (eg, lack of sidewalks and public park space as a barrier to physical activity interventions). Identify existing limitations to local broadband internet connectivity, and articulate how structural barriers to information access can affect health. |
| Step 3: Identify and pursue coalitions to enact social, economic, and policy infrastructures needed to sustainably deploy interventions as designed |
Which providers, researchers, organizations, experts, and policymakers can help answer these questions? How are we ensuring that community partners are active in this process, driving our inquiries and discussions about possible solutions? What kind of funding is necessary to sustain the benefits derived from this intervention, and what can we do to secure it? |
Contact state legislature to call for allocation of public funding of broadband internet access for low-income patients and families who may benefit from mHealth intervention. |
amHealth: mobile health.