Abstract
COVID-19 is disproportionately impacting people in low-income communities. Primary care staff in deprived areas have unique insights into the challenges posed by the pandemic. This study explores the impact of COVID-19 from the perspective of primary care practitioners in the most deprived region of England. Deep End general practices serve communities in the region’s most socioeconomically disadvantaged areas. This study used semi-structured interviews followed by thematic analysis. In total, 15 participants were interviewed (11 General Practitioners (GPs), 2 social prescribing link workers and 2 nurses) with Deep End careers ranging from 3 months to 31 years. Participants were recruited via purposive and snowball sampling. Interviews were conducted using video-conferencing software. Data were analysed using thematic content analysis through a social determinants of health lens. Our results are categorised into four themes: the immediate health risks of COVID-19 on patients and practices; factors likely to exacerbate existing deprivation; the role of social prescribing during COVID-19; wider implications for remote consulting. We add qualitative understanding to existing quantitative data, showing patients from low socioeconomic backgrounds have worse outcomes from COVID-19. Deep End practitioners have valuable insights into the impact of social distancing restrictions and remote consulting on patients’ health and wellbeing. Their experiences should guide future pandemic response measures and any move to “digital first” primary care to ensure that existing inequalities are not worsened.
Highlights
Lockdowns have been shown to be effective at suppressing the number of cases from COVID-19 [4,5], concerns have been raised that the social distancing measures themselves are not without harm and that these harms will fall disproportionately on those living in disadvantaged circumstances [6]
We found that the UK vaccine rollout was becoming a priority for primary care staff
Deprived communities are facing the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic
Summary
Lockdowns have been shown to be effective at suppressing the number of cases (and deaths) from COVID-19 [4,5], concerns have been raised that the social distancing measures themselves are not without harm and that these harms will fall disproportionately on those living in disadvantaged circumstances [6]. These harms range from early consequences of people delaying medical assessments for COVID
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More From: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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