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Disruption to diabetes and hypertension care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Latin America and the Caribbean and mitigation approaches: a scoping review

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posted on 2024-06-26, 10:38 authored by Oluwabunmi Ogungbe, Samira Barbara Jabakhanji, Roopa Mehta, John McCaffreyJohn McCaffrey, David ByrneDavid Byrne, Sinead Hurley, Lori Rosman, Eyram Cyril Bansah, Folahan Ibukun, Irene Afua Quarshie, Katherine Lord, Yidan Lu, Yunzhi Wang, Asma Rayani, Hairong Liu, Ann Joseph, Alejandro Escobosa, Ivy Nyamuame, Jieun Lee, Ning Meng, Ibrahim Jehanzeb, Temitope Akinyemi, Shoichiro Nohara, Mauro F. F. Mediano, Yvette Yeboah-Kordieh, Cecilia de Sousa, Juliana Farhat, Renato Bandeira de Mello, Tara Taeed, Lawrence J. Appel, Sonia Y. Angell, Edward GreggEdward Gregg, Kunihiro Matsushita

Background The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted care for non-communicable diseases globally. This study synthesizes evidence on disruptions to primary care, focusing on hypertension and diabetes care and mitigation approaches taken during the pandemic in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC).

Methods We conducted a scoping review, searching nine electronic databases for studies from January 2020 to December 2022 on COVID-19-related primary care disruptions and interventions, including studies on hospital-based interventions given their relevance to the pandemic response in LAC. We adapted the Primary Health Care Performance Initiative framework to develop our search strategy and synthesize data. For studies reporting interventions, we included studies conducted outside of LAC.

Findings Of 33,510 references screened, 388 studies were included (259 reported disruptions in LAC, 61 interventions in LAC, 63 interventions outside LAC, and five interventions from countries within and outside LAC), with three-quarters presenting data from Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and Peru; few studies focused on rural areas. Additionally, the few studies that adequately quantified care disruptions reported a reduction in hypertension and diabetes control during the pandemic (e.g., hypertension control rate decreased from 68% to 55% in Mexico). Frequently reported causes of disruption included burnout and mental health challenges among healthcare workers (with disproportionate effects by type of worker), reduced medication supplies, and reduced frequency of clinic visits by patients (e.g., due to financial constraints). The most reported interventions included remote care strategies (e.g., smartphone applications, virtual meeting platforms) and mental health programs for healthcare workers. Remote care strategies were deemed feasible for care delivery, triaging, and clinical support for non-physicians. Patients were generally satisfied with telemedicine, whereas providers had mixed perceptions. Robust evidence on the effectiveness of remote care strategies for diabetes and hypertension care was unavailable in LAC.

Interpretation Hypertension and diabetes control appeared to worsen in LAC during the pandemic. Major reported causes of care disruptions were workforce issues, reduced medication supply, and changes in patient perceptions of seeking and receiving primary healthcare. Remote care strategies were feasible for various purposes and were well received by patients. However, the lack of data on intervention effectiveness underscores the importance of strengthening research capacity to generate robust evidence during future pandemics. Developing resilient healthcare systems able to provide care for hypertension and diabetes during future pandemics will depend on investment in the healthcare workforce, medical supply chain, health data and research infrastructure, and technology readiness.

Funding This work was supported by funding from the World Bank to Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences. Additional support to RCSI was provided by Science Foundation Ireland, Converge Programme, grant number 22/RP/10091.

Funding

World Bank to Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences

Science Foundation Ireland, Converge Programme, grant number 22/RP/10091

History

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.medrxiv.org/ Published version is available in BMJ Open doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-074443 and RCSI repository https://hdl.handle.net/10779/rcsi.25164299.v1

Published Citation

Ogungbe O, et al. Disruption to diabetes and hypertension care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Latin America and the Caribbean and mitigation approaches: a scoping review. medRxiv 2024;24305997

Publication Date

19 April 2024

Department/Unit

  • School of Population Health
  • Health Psychology

Publisher

medRxiv

Version

  • Submitted Version (Preprint)