Factors disrupting the continuity of care for patients with chronic disease during the pandemics: A systematic review

Author:

Ghanbari‐Jahromi Mohadeseh1ORCID,Kharazmi Erfan2ORCID,Bastani Peivand3,Shams Mesbah4,Marzaleh Milad Ahmadi5ORCID,Amin Bahrami Mohammad2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Healthcare Management, Student Research Committee Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz Iran

2. Department of Healthcare Management, Health Human Resources Research Center, School of Health Management and Information Sciences Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz Iran

3. College of Business, Government and Law Flinders University Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Department of Internal Medicine, Endocrinology and Metabolism Research Center Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz Iran

5. Department of Health in Disasters and Emergencies, School of Health Management and Information Sciences Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz Iran

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsContinuous routine care is necessary to prevent long‐term complications of chronic diseases and improve patients' health conditions. This review study was conducted to determine the factors disrupting continuity of care for patients with chronic diseases during the pandemic.MethodsAll original articles published on factors disrupting continuity of care for patients with chronic disease during a pandemic between December 2019 and June 28, 2023, in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and ProQuest databases were searched. Selection of articles, data extraction, and qualitative evaluation of articles (through STROBE and COREQ checklist) were done by two researchers separately. Data graphing form was used to extract the data of each study and then the data were classified by thematic analysis method.ResultsOut of 1708 articles reviewed from the databases, 22 were included. The factors disrupting the continuity of care for patients with chronic diseases during the epidemics were classified into two main categories: patient‐side factors and health system‐side factors. Patient‐side factors including psychological, individual and social, disease‐related, and health system‐side factors including provider access, health system institutional, and infrastructural and financial problems were among the subcategories disrupting the continuity of care for patients with chronic diseases during the pandemic. Based on the studies, psychological factors and access to the provider were among the most frequent factors affecting the continuity of care for patients with chronic diseases in the pandemic.ConclusionConsidering the factors disrupting the continuity of care and applying appropriate interventions based on them, can guarantee the continuity of providing services to chronic patients in health crises.

Funder

Shiraz University of Medical Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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