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Social networks as education strategies for indigenous patients with rheumatoid arthritis during COVID-19 pandemic. Are they useful?

Rosana Maris QuintanaSofia FernandezLourdes GuggiaMartina FayCecilia CamachoGraciela GomezJazmin PetrelliAndrés HoneriViviana Arenas SolórzanoAna BensiMaria Elena CalvoIngris Pelaez-BallestasMarcela ValdataBernardo A Pons-Estel
Published in: Clinical rheumatology (2022)
The strategies developed for this indigenous community were of no utility, probably because of socio-cultural, economic, and digital barriers. They should be designed and implemented identifying the target group and its environment. Key Points • Online education strategies should be designed with cultural sensitivity. • Technological barriers make digital inequality visible in vulnerable groups. • Educational interventions should have a collaborative design and they should be created together with the communities. • The COVID-19 pandemic has deepened inequalities in the health care and follow-up of patients with rheumatic diseases, especially between most socially and economically disadvantaged groups.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • quality improvement
  • mental health
  • health information
  • social media
  • health insurance
  • network analysis