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Clinician's commentary to accompany "group well-child care model for Latino children in immigrant families: Adapting to and learning from the COVID-19 context".

Bianca T VillalobosJuventino Hernandez Rodriguez
Published in: Families, systems & health : the journal of collaborative family healthcare (2022)
Comments on an article by Nomi S. Weiss-Laxer et al. (see record 2022-71815-001). Providing virtual services takes time for many providers and families to get familiar with and many prefer in-person contact over telehealth; however, many of the challenges of doing telehealth can be overcome with creativity and flexibility. As clinicians, they agree with the authors that using the features of the technology to our advantage was helpful and that confirming with each person that they had privacy was vital to effective communication. Problem-solving was often needed, and most times parents had the best ideas for working around the limitations of their home environment. The article highlighted the possibility of hybrid models of care considering the needs and wants of both patients and providers. Such a hybrid approach can increase connection to clinics through in-person visits which can jump-start the establishment of therapeutic relationships and build trust (confianza) with clinicians and clinic staff. As the pandemic becomes more controlled, giving parents a choice and flexibility to change modalities can help them stay engaged and reduce drop out. Clinics will need to assess the language preferences of the families they serve to ensure they have enough staff and providers who are bilingual or multilingual to deliver such programs or use trained interpreters. These concerns would need to be addressed if implementation were increased on a large scale. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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