Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.

The COVID pandemic necessitated shifting to virtual care. Our aim was to describe, and identify the challenges and satisfaction with the virtual care experience of a subset of participants from two established Canadian Trials Network (CTN) cohorts: CTN 222 (HIV/HCV coinfection) and CTN 314: CHANGE H...

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Main Authors: Sharon L Walmsley, Majid Nabipoor, Valerie Martel-Laferriere, Mona Loutfy, Curtis Cooper, Marie-Louise Vachon, Bryan Boyachuk, Pamela Aldebes, Marina B Klein, CTN-COVID Sub-study Group
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-05-01
Series:PLOS Digital Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000857
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author Sharon L Walmsley
Majid Nabipoor
Valerie Martel-Laferriere
Mona Loutfy
Curtis Cooper
Marie-Louise Vachon
Bryan Boyachuk
Pamela Aldebes
Marina B Klein
CTN-COVID Sub-study Group
author_facet Sharon L Walmsley
Majid Nabipoor
Valerie Martel-Laferriere
Mona Loutfy
Curtis Cooper
Marie-Louise Vachon
Bryan Boyachuk
Pamela Aldebes
Marina B Klein
CTN-COVID Sub-study Group
author_sort Sharon L Walmsley
collection DOAJ
description The COVID pandemic necessitated shifting to virtual care. Our aim was to describe, and identify the challenges and satisfaction with the virtual care experience of a subset of participants from two established Canadian Trials Network (CTN) cohorts: CTN 222 (HIV/HCV coinfection) and CTN 314: CHANGE HIV (Correlates of Healthy Aging in geriatric HIV infection) - persons > 65 years age. We hypothesized that vulnerable populations could face challenges with virtual care related to age, mental health or drug addiction. Consenting participants provided demographic information, completed a non-validated 18-item self- administered questionnaire on their virtual care experience, and reported HIV specific laboratory collection and prescription refills during the COVID pandemic. Data on CD4 T lymphocyte counts and HIV viral loads were extracted from medical records. A total of 454 individuals participated between February 2021 and March 2023, including 133 from CTN 314 and 321 from CTN 222. Overall, 55.3% engaged in virtual care. In multivariable regression models (analysis with SAS and R software) use of virtual care was higher in the aging cohort (p < .0001) but did not vary with current alcohol, drug use or self-reported depression (p > .05). The most common reason for not engaging was that it was failure to offer. Of those who engaged, 55% reporting being very satisfied, 36.3% somewhat satisfied, and 8.8% not satisfied. Ten percent of the older and 16% of the HCV cohort, reported technology difficulties as a barrier to use. Those with a detectable HIV viral load were more likely to engage in virtual care, p < .05. 81.3% of participants had HIV blood tests as frequently as before the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite high satisfaction, the majority (80%) prefers in person visits. When offering virtual care, clinics need to ensure all eligible patients are aware of how to access the services and consider patient needs and preferences.
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spelling doaj-art-63b27a5b734d4ef7b17f092b197ebe192025-08-20T03:13:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Digital Health2767-31702025-05-0145e000085710.1371/journal.pdig.0000857Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.Sharon L WalmsleyMajid NabipoorValerie Martel-LaferriereMona LoutfyCurtis CooperMarie-Louise VachonBryan BoyachukPamela AldebesMarina B KleinCTN-COVID Sub-study GroupThe COVID pandemic necessitated shifting to virtual care. Our aim was to describe, and identify the challenges and satisfaction with the virtual care experience of a subset of participants from two established Canadian Trials Network (CTN) cohorts: CTN 222 (HIV/HCV coinfection) and CTN 314: CHANGE HIV (Correlates of Healthy Aging in geriatric HIV infection) - persons > 65 years age. We hypothesized that vulnerable populations could face challenges with virtual care related to age, mental health or drug addiction. Consenting participants provided demographic information, completed a non-validated 18-item self- administered questionnaire on their virtual care experience, and reported HIV specific laboratory collection and prescription refills during the COVID pandemic. Data on CD4 T lymphocyte counts and HIV viral loads were extracted from medical records. A total of 454 individuals participated between February 2021 and March 2023, including 133 from CTN 314 and 321 from CTN 222. Overall, 55.3% engaged in virtual care. In multivariable regression models (analysis with SAS and R software) use of virtual care was higher in the aging cohort (p < .0001) but did not vary with current alcohol, drug use or self-reported depression (p > .05). The most common reason for not engaging was that it was failure to offer. Of those who engaged, 55% reporting being very satisfied, 36.3% somewhat satisfied, and 8.8% not satisfied. Ten percent of the older and 16% of the HCV cohort, reported technology difficulties as a barrier to use. Those with a detectable HIV viral load were more likely to engage in virtual care, p < .05. 81.3% of participants had HIV blood tests as frequently as before the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite high satisfaction, the majority (80%) prefers in person visits. When offering virtual care, clinics need to ensure all eligible patients are aware of how to access the services and consider patient needs and preferences.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000857
spellingShingle Sharon L Walmsley
Majid Nabipoor
Valerie Martel-Laferriere
Mona Loutfy
Curtis Cooper
Marie-Louise Vachon
Bryan Boyachuk
Pamela Aldebes
Marina B Klein
CTN-COVID Sub-study Group
Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.
PLOS Digital Health
title Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.
title_full Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.
title_fullStr Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.
title_short Evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with HIV during the COVID pandemic.
title_sort evaluation of the virtual care experience for persons in prospective cohorts with hiv during the covid pandemic
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000857
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