4.3 Article

Changes in Access to Health Services during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Scoping Review

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031749

Keywords

COVID-19; health services' accessibility; delivery of health care; health care inequalities

Funding

  1. Master in Public Health (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)

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This study aims to synthesize the existing knowledge, analyze the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on access to non-COVID-19 healthcare, and identify knowledge gaps. The review found a general reduction in healthcare service utilization, with a lack of resources as the major barrier. Predisposing and enabling factors also influenced access.
The COVID-19 pandemic and the measures adopted are having a profound impact on a major goal of public healthcare systems: universal access to health services. The objective is to synthesize the available knowledge on access to health care for non-COVID-19 conditions and to identify knowledge gaps. A scoping review was conducted searching different databases (Medline, Google Scholar, etc.) for original articles published between December 2019 and September 2021. A total of 53 articles were selected and analyzed using the Aday and Andersen framework as a guide. Of these, 37 analyzed changes in levels of use of health services, 15 focused on the influencing factors and barriers to access, and 1 studied both aspects. Most focused on specific diseases and the early stages of the pandemic, based on a review of records. Analyses of the impact on primary care services' use, unmet needs or inequalities in access were scarce. A generalized reduction in the use of health services was described. The most frequent access barrier described for non-COVID-19 conditions related to the services was a lack of resources, while barriers related to the population were predisposing (fear of contagion, stigma, or anticipating barriers) and enabling characteristics (worse socioeconomic status and an increase in technological barriers). In conclusion, our results show a general reduction in services' use in the early stages of the pandemic, as well as new barriers to access and the exacerbation of existing ones. In view of these results, more studies are required on the subsequent stages of the pandemic, to shed more light on the factors that have influenced access and the pandemic's impact on equity of access.

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