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Understanding Burdens and Barriers to Dermatological Management, and Potential for Virtual Care in Northern and Rural Canadian Indigenous Communities: A National Healthcare Practitioner Cross-Sectional Survey Analysis

Abstract

Northern and rural Canadian Indigenous communities (NRCIC) are well known to face health disparities, yet many remain formally not documented, including dermatologic challenges. We performed a mixed methods cross-sectional national survey of healthcare practitioners (HCPs) (n=50; mostly dermatologists, general practitioners, nurses, and pediatricians) to better understand the current NRCIC dermatology status and care needs, barriers to accessing dermatology and impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, facilitators and barriers to virtual care, and practitioner recommendations. Most HCP participants identified NRCIC as underserviced in dermatologic care. HCPs reported atopic dermatitis and bacterial skin infections among the most common conditions, and consistently raised concerns for disproportionately severe and inadequately managed disease compared to urban populations. Barriers to accessing dermatology care in NRCIC broadly encompassed proximity to care, long wait times, inadequate supply and access to therapies, impractical and burdensome skin care regimens, socioeconomic and implementation barriers, transportation challenges, and cultural barriers. Although the COVID-19 pandemic helped establish virtual care for NRCIC to mitigate access-to-care issues, participants identified travel and cost-effectiveness barriers, concerns for poor infrastructure to sustain virtual care, inadequate photo quality, and lack of in-person care as persistent and growing problems. As future solutions, HCPs recommended increasing in-person dermatologist visits to remote communities, increasing educational dermatology care programs for rural HCPs, increasing use of virtual care to these communities, stimulating assistance (eg. coordinators) to facilitate care, and further cultural safety training. Future research addressing NRCIC, including direct input from community members, may help bridge dermatologic care gaps and improve health equity.

Authors

Asiniwasis R; Merati N; Lukmanji A; Odeshi O; Eglington T; Philips Z; Hinther K; Chu D; Waller B; Van Eaon M

Journal

International Journal of Indigenous Health, Vol. 20, No. 1,

Publisher

University of Toronto Libraries - UOTL

Publication Date

May 29, 2025

DOI

10.32799/ijih.v20i1.42156

ISSN

2291-9368
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