Barriers and facilitators to implementing project ECHO in Malaysia during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Abstract

Objective: In Malaysia, HIV is concentrated among key populations who experience barriers to care due to stigma and healthcare discrimination. The COVID-19 pandemic has increased barriers to healthcare. Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) is a transformative tele-education strategy that could improve HIV prevention and treatment. Methods: Practicing physicians who were aged 18 years or older and had internet access participated in asynchronous online focus groups. Results: Barriers to Project ECHO were conflicting priorities, time constraints, and technology. Facilitators included content and format, dedicated time, asynchronized flexible programming, incentives, and ensuring technology was available. Conclusion: Project ECHO is a promising intervention that can increase physicians’ knowledge and skill set in specialty medicine during the COVID-19 pandemic. Interventionists in Malaysia in particular, but also in general, should consider these barriers and facilitators when developing Project ECHO as they may aid in developing a more robust program and increase participation. © The Author(s) 2022.

Keywords

COVID-19, HIV Infections, Humans, Malaysia, Pandemics, Social Stigma, Article, Bandwidth, Coronavirus disease 2019, Data analysis, Ethnicity, General practitioner, Health care cost, Health care personnel, Human, Human immunodeficiency virus, Incentive, Pandemic, Physician, Social media, Transgender, Workload, Epidemiology, Human immunodeficiency virus infection, Malaysia, Pandemic, Social stigma

Divisions

medicinedept

Funders

None

Publication Title

Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care

Volume

21

Publisher

SAGE Publications Inc.

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