Dementia and COVID-19 among Older African American Adults: A Scoping Review of Healthcare Access and Resources
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Disparities in Healthcare Affecting Older African American Adults
1.2. Healthcare Accessibility and Resources
1.3. Current Study
2. Methods
2.1. Research Design
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
2.4. Data Screening
2.5. Summary of Literature Search
2.6. Data Organization
3. Results
3.1. Data Synthesis
3.2. Findings
3.3. Participants’ Characteristics
3.4. Healthcare Accessibility Disparities
3.5. Acceptance by Healthcare Systems
3.6. Healthcare Resource Disparities
3.7. Materials and Support Resources
3.8. Discussion and Implications
## | Components | Attributes | Studies |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Approachability | Systemic and structural disparities, transportation, disproportionate representation, healthcare professional attitudes, poor medical interaction | [26,27,37,38,39,40] |
2 | Acceptability | Medicare and private insurance, comorbidities, age, ethnicity, appointment availability, and limited healthcare facilities. | [26,35,36,38,39] |
3 | Appropriateness | Physician suitability, timely care, appropriate care. | [26,27,37,39] |
4 | Availability | Appointments, healthcare professionals, facilities, and lack of digital communication with patients. Low ratio of professionals to patients, poor access to technology | [26,27,36,38,40] |
# | Components | Attributes | Studies |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Financial insecurities | Low income, lack of insurance, and insurance issues. | [36,38,39,40] |
2 | Knowledge gaps | Lack of appropriate knowledge about dementia, COVID-19, and how to care for themselves to avoid exaggerating their condition. Lack of protective strategies and appropriate information. | [37,39] |
3 | Materials, personnel, facilities, funds | Low income, poor socioeconomic status, lower education, lack of informational materials, limited health facilities, limited facilities such as ICU, mechanical ventilation, absence of oxygen requirements, structural inequities, and inadequate support structures such as cognitive screening. | [26,36,37,38] |
4 | Internet, telephone, transportation service constraints | Lack of access to the Internet and telephone services. Issues with transportation to healthcare facilities | [36,38,39,40] |
5 | Social support resources | Risk of loneliness, sadness, and social disconnection during the pandemic | [35,36,37] |
6 | Mechanical ventilation and ambulatory care services | Lack of ambulatory care, higher need for intensive care units | [26,36,37,39,40] |
3.9. Implications for Practice
3.10. Limitations of the Review and Suggestions for Further Research
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Key Concepts | Search Terms | ||
---|---|---|---|
African American | OR | “Black Americans” OR “blacks” | |
AND | Older adults | OR | “Older adult” OR elderly OR geriatric OR aging OR senior OR “older people” OR “aged 65” OR 65 + OR elderly OR senior OR aged or older or elder or geriatric or “elderly people” OR “older people.” |
AND | Dementia | OR | “Alzheimer” OR “cognitive impairment” OR “memory loss” OR “mild cognitive impairment” OR “age-associated cognitive impairment” OR “mild cognitive decline” OR “mild cognitive dysfunction” |
AND | COVID-19 | OR | “Coronavirus” OR “2019-ncov” OR “cov-19” OR “pandemic” |
AND | Healthcare Accessibility | OR | “Health access” OR “access to healthcare” OR “health services accessibility” |
AND | Resources | OR | “Support” OR “products” OR “services.” |
Studies | Type of Study | Database | Outcomes (Access/Health Resources) | Health Conditions | Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ge et al., 2021 [35] | Exploratory study | Atla Religion Database with AtlaSerials | Social isolation affected by poor access to technology among older African American adults. Lack of culturally adapted treatments. | Dementia and COVID-19 | N = 16 individuals with dementia and COVID-19 who were involved in single interviews over three months. All participants were Black or African American. |
Gilstrap et al. 2022 [27] | Cross-sectional study | APA Psychinfo | Excess mortality among older adults with dementia, especially in Asian, Black, and Hispanic populations and people living in nursing homes, even in areas with low COVID-19 prevalence. Reduced healthcare access and resources (36.7%; 95% CI, 35.2–38.2% for older Black populations) | Dementia and COVID-19 | N = 53,640,888 Among older adults diagnosed as having dementia in 2019, 63.5% were women, 2.7% were Asian, 9.2% were Black, 5.7% were Hispanic, 80.7% were White, and 1.7% were identified as other (included all races or ethnicities other than those given) |
Holaday et al., 2022 [36] | Cross-sectional analysis | APA Psychinfo | Low odds of access to primary care (odds ratio = 0.72; 95 confidence interval (CI): 0.61–0.87; p < 0.001); high loneliness among older African American adults. Use of Medicare, financial insecurities, Internet/phone | Dementia and COVID-19 | N = 11,114 community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries and self-reported people with dementia and COVID-19 |
Kenerly et al., 2021 [26] | Empirical studies | Medline | In-hospital mortality, mechanical ventilation, reduced healthcare access, and resources among older African American adults. Intensive care unit shortages. | Dementia, COVID-19, heart disease, kidney disease, cerebrovascular disease, hypertension | N = 710 patients, 73 (10.3%) presented with altered mental status (AMS). They also presented with cardiovascular diseases, dementia, and COVID-19. The majority of the population were older African Americans (83.4%). |
Kim et al., 2022 [37] | Longitudinal cohort study | Psychology and Behavioral Sciences | Primary outcomes are COVID-19 hospitalization. Severe outcomes are intensive care unit (ICU), intubation, dialysis, stroke, and in-hospital death. Reduced access to health resources for older African American adults. Lack of medications. Ambulatory care. | Dementia, COVID-19, stroke, intubation. | N = 47,219 cohort of older patients aged 65+ with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 and dementia. Median age was 74 years; 47.4% were male, 24.3% non-Hispanic White, 23.3% non-Hispanic Black, and 18.4% Hispanic. |
Sadler et al., 2020 [38] | Purposive sampling, open-ended qualitative interviews | Academic search complete | Reports on inability to access quality care and participate in medical appointments among older African American adults. Poor transportation. Financial insecurities. Telemedicine. | Dementia, COVID-19 | N = 63 family caregivers interviewed for older adults with dementia and COVID-19 across eight states. About 89% of participants were female, 78% White, 10% Black, 5% Asian, 3% biracial, and 2% Native American. 36% of respondents reported that those they cared for received Medicaid |
Silver et al., 2020 [39] | Empirical study (Retrospective study) | Academic search complete | Older African American adults were disproportionately represented in hospitalizations. Reduced healthcare accessibility (odds ratio = 0.92; 95% CI, 0.70–1.20) Lack of health education. Financial insecurities. | Dementia, COVID-19, respiratory problems, fever | N = 249 patients with dementia and COVID-19. The median age was 59; 44% were male, and 86% were aged ≥ 65 years or had ≥ 1 comorbidity. Overall, 87% were Black. Older African American adults had longer symptom duration at presentation (6.41 vs. 5.88 days; p = 0.05) |
Wiese et al., 2021 [40] | Empirical study (dependent test design) | Medline | Limited access to healthcare, especially for rural-dwelling older African Americans. Lack of insurance. Financial insecurities. Cognitive screening. | Dementia, COVID-19 | N = 60; 70% of the sample self-reported as older African American, Haitian Creole, or Hispanic with dementia and COVID-19; 75% were female. |
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Udoh, I.I.; Mpofu, E.; Prybutok, G. Dementia and COVID-19 among Older African American Adults: A Scoping Review of Healthcare Access and Resources. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043494
Udoh II, Mpofu E, Prybutok G. Dementia and COVID-19 among Older African American Adults: A Scoping Review of Healthcare Access and Resources. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043494
Chicago/Turabian StyleUdoh, Idorenyin Imoh, Elias Mpofu, and Gayle Prybutok. 2023. "Dementia and COVID-19 among Older African American Adults: A Scoping Review of Healthcare Access and Resources" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043494
APA StyleUdoh, I. I., Mpofu, E., & Prybutok, G. (2023). Dementia and COVID-19 among Older African American Adults: A Scoping Review of Healthcare Access and Resources. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043494