Background
Negative effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on access to care for other diseases are currently at debate.
Aim
To review existing literature on care access for non-Covid-19 conditions since the pandemic onset.
Methods
Scoping review using various databases (Medline, VHL, Web of Science, 2020/21). Terms used: ‘access', ‘health services', ‘Covid-19'. Out of 4,060 identified articles, 37 were selected after reviewing and assessing titles, abstracts and full text. Aday and Andersen's framework guided the analysis.
Results
Of selected articles, 21 analyse impact on health services use; 8 on performance; 8 on access barriers. Most analyse specific services during early pandemic stages through register review, showing an initial decline in use with inconsistent results on recovery. Some indicate increased complexity of treated patients and treatment delays. Studies surveying professionals analyse the impact on services performance or clinical practice, reporting a decrease in consultations/interventions for diverse pathologies and response implementation (e.g. telemedicine), but not how they affected access. Few studies focus on social inequalities in use, showing a greater reduction in low-income or ethnic minority users. Studies on unmet needs, access or barriers based on user surveys or qualitative methods are scarce, focused on a pathology or clinical area. Particularly in Spain, studies analyse impact on use of emergency, primary care and cancer diagnosis, and on emergency and cardiology services functioning. Studies based on user surveys are lacking: only a qualitative study analysed access difficulties for chronic patients in confinement. Methodological weaknesses are identified.
Conclusions
Although currently emerging, studies analysing the pandemic impact on equal access to care for non-Covid-19 conditions are scarce, limited in focus and methodology, especially in Spain. Comprehensive medium/long-term impact assessments, including analysis of causes, are needed.
Key messages
Research is lacking on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on healthcare access, particularly for vulnerable groups. Further evidence is needed to improve health systems resilience in the future.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.