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Abstract Details
'It's a different way to do medicine': Exploring the affordances of telehealth for hepatitis C healthcare
Int J Drug Policy. 2022 Oct 15;110:103875. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2022.103875.Online ahead of print.
1School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Deakin University; Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe University. Electronic address: r.fomiatti@deakin.edu.au.
2ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society, Swinburne University of Technology.
3Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe University; Centre for Social Research in Health, University of New South Wales.
Abstract
While the use of telehealth was common in hepatitis C healthcare in Australia in remote and regional areas prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, it has been used more broadly to improve access to hepatitis C heathcare during the pandemic. Despite its widespread uptake, little research has explored how telehealth shapes hepatitis C healthcare. In this article, we draw on the concept of affordances (Latour, 2002) and interviews with 25 healthcare practitioners to explore the emergent possibilities for hepatitis C care that take shape through telehealth. Despite suggestions that telehealth is comparable to in-person care, healthcare practitioners' accounts suggest that telehealth significantly changes the nature of their experience of providing healthcare for hepatitis C. According to these service practitioners, while it increased access to hepatitis C healthcare during the pandemic, it also afforded narrower, less personal healthcare encounters, with a focus on simple and singular issues, and reduced opportunities for communication and rapport. These affordances also discouraged the use of interpreters and by extension the inclusion of patients from non-English speaking backgrounds. However, the data collected also suggest that telehealth has the potential to afford more informal and relaxed healthcare environments and dispositions between healthcare practitioners and patients, potentially disrupting classic practitioner-patient power dynamics. In concluding, the article considers how telehealth models of care might better afford quality hepatitis C healthcare and care beyond COVID-19 pandemic conditions.