最后一寸:弹出式COVID测试告诉我们的社区参与

Dante Della Vella, Michael F. Rayo
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行凸显了需要增加和更动态地获得医疗保健资源。它还揭示了向社区有效提供卫生资源的一个新的复杂问题,我们称之为最后一英寸问题。在我们最近与哥伦布公共卫生部和俄亥俄州国民警卫队合作开展的COVID-19弹出式测试工作中,我们观察到,即使将医疗保健相关服务直接运送给社区成员,他们也不一定会使用该服务。我们认为,跨越这最后一寸将要求我们通过联合活动的视角重新制定公共卫生倡议:医疗机构和公众之间的伙伴关系。我们的工作集中在三个问题上。我们如何与公众接触,并促进人们与我们的医疗保健提供者之间的共同点?作为其中的一部分,我们如何与社区合作,以确定在给定的一天动态地将我们的资源引导到哪里?最后,当我们出现在“正确”的地方时,社区会加入我们吗?我们最近的工作创建和部署灵活的算法,自适应监视测试(FAAST)已经产生了有希望的见解来回答这些问题。在我们最初的测试中,我们观察到社区参与的持续增加,以及通过多次迭代程序增加的积极性。在所有的测试地点,我们也一直过多地代表了传统上服务不足的少数群体。说服社区参与弹出式测试的见解可能会产生可重复的、可推广的策略,公共卫生官员和医疗保健提供者可以通过这些策略跨越最后一寸。通过建立和培养可靠的社区关系,公共卫生机构与其组成社区合作,可以主动监测其社区的健康状况,从而促进对新出现的威胁作出更有弹性的反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Final Inch: What Pop-Up COVID Testing Tells Us about Community Engagement
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need for increased and more dynamic access to healthcare resources. It has also revealed a novel complication to the effective delivery of health resources to communities, which we call the final inch problem. In our recent COVID-19 pop-up testing work with Columbus Public Health and the Ohio National Guard, we have observed that, even when a healthcare-related service is transported directly to community members, it is not a given that they will use that service. We argue that crossing this final inch will require us to reframe public health initiatives through the lens of joint activity: a partnership between healthcare institutions and the public. Our work focuses on three questions. How do we engage with the public and foster common ground between people and our healthcare providers? As part of this, how can we work with the community to determine where to dynamically direct our resources on a given day? Finally, when we show up at the “right” place, will the community join us? Our recent work creating and deploying the Flexible Algorithmic, Adaptive Surveillance Testing (FAAST) has generated promising insights to answer these questions. Throughout our initial tests, we observed a continuous increase in community participation as well as increased positivity through multiple iterations of the program. We consistently overrepresented traditionally underserved minority groups in all testing locations as well. Insights for convincing communities to participate in pop-up testing may yield repeatable, generalizable strategies by which public health officials and healthcare providers may cross the final inch. Through establishing and nurturing reliable community relationships, public health institutions working in partnership with their constituent communities can proactively monitor the health of their communities, thereby facilitating a more resilient response to emerging threats.
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