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Editor:
Deirdre E. Logan, PhD
Children's Hospital Boston
Boston, USA

Associate Editor:
Abbie L. Jordan, PhD
University of Bath
Bath, UK






Copyright © 2024,
Special Interest Group on
Pain in Childhood,
International Association
for the Study of Pain®,
www.childpain.org

ISSN 1715-3956

Disclaimer:
Information appearing in Pediatric Pain Letter is not reviewed by, and is not necessarily endorsed by, the Special Interest Group on Pain in Childhood, nor by IASP ®.

Vol. 26 No. 1

February 2024

Commentary

Ethical issues in the equitable virtual delivery of pediatric chronic pain care

Mica Gabrielle Marbil and Kathryn A. Birnie

printable version (PDF)

Many healthcare services were provided virtually during the COVID-19 pandemic (Killackey et al., 2021). Despite the ongoing demand for virtual pediatric chronic pain treatment, there is limited research guiding this practice (Birnie et al., 2021). The research that does exist often excludes equity-seeking groups (Birnie et al., 2022); consequently, present virtual care practices risk underserving minoritized populations. In response to recent discussions surrounding equity in research (Hood et al., 2022; Janevic et al., 2022), this commentary situates virtual care ethics within overlapping equity issues to emphasize necessary work towards ethical and equitable pediatric pain care. As such, it focuses primarily on virtual care ethical considerations of particular relevance to equity-seeking groups. The authors are most familiar with ethical guidelines that govern Canadian psychology (e.g., Canadian Psychological Association [CPA], 2017); however, references draw from various disciplines and loci with many shared ethical principles and values, and can be contextualized accordingly.

Virtual care, ethics, and equity

Virtual care comprises any remote interaction (i.e. encounters that are not in-person and rely on any form of digital communication or information technologies) between patients and health professionals to facilitate care (Shaw et al., 2018). Although virtual care usage has increased since the COVID-19 pandemic, even after easing public health restrictions (Shaver, 2022), effective virtual care implementation for pediatric chronic pain is challenging without guidelines to inform health professionals and policymakers (Birnie et al., 2021). While both in-person and virtual care have been shown to be viable and effective for pediatric pain management (Fisher et al., 2022), published work to date comparing remote delivery of one treatment to its equivalent in-person counterpart is generally limited to demonstrations of feasibility and acceptability (e.g. Kashikar-Zuck et al., 2022; Hale et al., 2023), with little information available to assess the efficacy of virtual relative to in-person care.

Virtual care ethics for pediatric chronic pain (e.g. Henderson et al., 2012) have minimally focused on youth in equity-seeking groups (e.g. racialized, lower socioeconomic status), despite the disproportionate impact of chronic pain on these populations (Craig et al., 2020). Recruitment from tertiary pain clinics in most research is intrinsically biased by socially maintained inequities, which can involve age, gender, and race (Crombie & Davies, 1998). Furthermore, discussions of equity in virtual care (e.g. Budhwani et al., 2022) are not always integrated within ethical contexts. We believe that equity is inherent to ethical care and herein outline considerations for ethical and equitable virtual pediatric pain management.

Informed consent

Informed consent is necessary for ethical care (Chaet et al., 2017; Keenan et al., 2021). Patients must be informed of benefits and risks, given the opportunity to fully participate in decision-making, and have this decision documented (CPA, 2017), thereby facilitating patient autonomy. However, with research underrepresenting equity-seeking groups, who are both more vulnerable to chronic pain and underserved by healthcare services (Latimer et al., 2018; Craig et al., 2020), the current understanding of virtual care’s benefits and risks is inadequate. This adversely impacts individuals’ ability to be truly informed when providing consent.

In considering virtual care as a treatment option, health professionals should be cognizant of the many factors that influence patient and caregiver preferences, and guide discussions of consent to ensure that these are appropriately addressed therein. For example, in-person care might be preferred over virtual care more generally (Terrell et al., 2021) or for certain aspects of multidisciplinary pediatric pain treatment (Ruskin et al., 2023). Importantly, virtual care implications are not equal. For some, it increases accessibility by removing travel costs associated with in-person services (Terrell et al., 2021); for others, it is a barrier to quality care. Families with lower income might have less access to technology or possess challenges with digital literacy needed for virtual care (Lindsay et al., 2023). Virtual care is not universally defined by insurance companies, complicating financial reimbursement where such health service models apply (Henderson et al., 2012). Moreover, other factors, such as language differences, can increase difficulty with virtual engagement and communication (Lindsay et al., 2023). One review identified virtual care’s lack of cultural or contextual relevance for Indigenous peoples, compounded with mistrust in the health system and low access to internet and technology resulting from intersectional health disparities (Budhwani et al., 2022). In general, pain management preferences for minoritized groups are infrequently examined, and better understanding of inequity in pediatric pain management has been deemed a priority (Eccleston et al., 2021). Therefore, it is important to clarify how virtual delivery might impact a patient’s individual circumstance to best ensure they and their families are properly informed when providing consent.

In promoting equitable decision-making encounters, it should also be recognized that familial structures and norms (e.g. cultural) vary in the roles of youth, caregivers, and other members in a pediatric patient’s circle of care, who might all have distinct preferences in decision-making (Unguru, 2022). People involved in the consent process may vary from family to family, and such encounters should be navigated with care that is personalized to the individual. Overall, virtual care decisions should appropriately involve individuals in a youth’s care team and address, as much as applicable, relevant sociocultural factors that impact care.

Competence

Competence can include knowledge, training, personal feelings of competence, and comfort delivering care remotely (Chaet et al., 2017; CPA, 2020). However, one study revealed that only 28.1% of Canadian and Dutch therapists delivering virtual care received training in telerehabilitation services (Giesbrecht et al., 2023), and minimal information describes whether health professionals are trained for equitable virtual care delivery. Notably, little is known on culturally adapted virtual interventions for pediatric care and if such modifications to treatment based on group characteristics are more appropriate than tailoring care to the individual (Willis et al., 2022). To ensure evidence-based, quality care, health professionals must undertake appropriate training for remote treatment provision, including cultural humility (Crawford & Serhal, 2020). Health professionals should be able to navigate virtual care when faced with the realities of health disparities, such as varying levels of digital health literacy, differences in technology access, and accessibility concerns. For example, diverse youth with chronic pain and caregivers require straightforward and helpful communication from health professionals (e.g. teaching and demonstration; Birnie et al., 2022), which would be facilitated by proper training in both virtual and multicultural care.

Privacy, confidentiality, and licensure

Maintaining privacy and confidentiality virtually is critical (Chaet et al., 2017). Health professionals should consider patient factors (e.g. patient discomfort in disclosing and receiving private and confidential information in their home environment; Curfman et al., 2021), and ensure patients’ awareness of privacy risks. However, minoritized groups (e.g. lower socioeconomic status) might not have the resources (e.g. private space, adequate technology) necessary for ethical delivery of remote treatment, hindering equitable accessibility and sustainability of virtual care (Willis et al., 2022).

Lastly, as in psychology, licensure for both in-person and virtual services might be jurisdictionally confined. Health professionals should provide alternatives if services would be discontinued or transferred (CPA, 2017, 2020), the effects of which might be particularly impactful for clients in equity-seeking groups who already experience barriers to care (Craig et al., 2020).

Summary and recommendations

An overarching theme in virtual care is to offer it as a choicefor patients. Youth with pain and caregivers have a desire for more involvement in treatment decisions (Birnie et al., 2022), but are often excluded from these conversations (Bui & Lima, 2021). One approach to address this is shared decision-making, which enables patients and health professionals to collaboratively decide on treatment given existing evidence and patient preferences (Makoul & Clayman, 2006; MacKenzie et al., 2023).

While remote delivery benefited many during the pandemic (D’Alessandro et al., 2020), researchers must examine virtual care with attention to diverse perspectives to ensure its ethical and equitable delivery. Unfortunately, the recurring underrepresentation of many equity-seeking groups in virtual care research mirrors health inequities that impact pain (Craig et al., 2020) and perpetuates a false and harmful narrative of equality (Janevic et al., 2022). Albeit virtual care might narrow inequities for some, it remains unclear how it impacts others already disadvantaged (e.g. with multiple intersecting minoritized identities). Therefore, more inclusive and equitable approaches are needed to inform our research and practice surrounding virtual care.

Recommendations for ethical and equitable virtual care research and implementation involve engaging relevant, diverse end users as early as possible (Janevic et al., 2022); including evaluative measures for virtual care (Chuo et al., 2020); and adopting elements of the digital health equity framework, which considers digitalinfluences in health and their interactions with social factors (Crawford & Serhal, 2020). In practice, this framework could help us understand how digital health literacy, alongside attitudes and beliefs, impacts the uptake of virtual care by equity-seeking groups (Crawford & Serhal, 2020), informs treatment decisions, and could support modifications for virtual care, as identified by diverse youth with chronic pain (Birnie et al., 2022). Recommendations of best practices for equitable and inclusive virtual pediatric chronic pain management for health professionals have previously been made available, and include using the home environment as an opportunity for more culturally inclusive practices and non-stigmatizing healthcare interactions (e.g. Birnie et al., 2022). These adaptations can be amplified by health professionals ensuring their own digital health literacy and cultural humility, and providing diverse supports and resources during virtual sessions.

The relevance of virtual care is clear, but important research and practice gaps persist, especially for equity-seeking groups. Understanding how to improve virtual care to address inequities is critical for its successful integration within the health system to suit patient needs.

Mica Gabrielle Marbil, BA (Hons.)
Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
email: mica.marbil[at]ucalgary.ca

Kathryn A. Birnie, PhD, RPsych
Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine and Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada

Cite as: Marbil MG, Birnie KA. Ethical issues in the equitable virtual delivery of pediatric chronic pain care Pediatric Pain Letter 2023;26(1):1-5. ppl.childpain.org

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