Poll: Older Adults’ Healthcare Plans Disrupted by Pandemic | Healthcare Innovation
New findings from the “National Poll on Healthy Aging” from the University of Michigan show the lingering effects of pandemic-related disruptions to routine healthcare, which could have lasting implications for older adults’ health. The poll is based at the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation and supported by AARP and Michigan Medicine.
The report states that “They had the appointments on their calendars, for weeks or months, to see their doctor or dentist, or to have an operation, procedure or medical test. But the pandemic disrupted those plans for around 30 percent of older adults with a scheduled appointment for each of these kinds of health care, according to a new poll of people age[d] 50 and older.”
Further, “And many of them—especially those who aren’t vaccinated against COVID-19—still haven’t gotten the preventive care or treatment that they had been scheduled to get last year.”
Key findings include:
People who had received a booster dose of vaccine in addition to the primary doses were more likely (36 percent) than non-boosted (21 percent) and unvaccinated (23 percent) adults to report that a dental appointment they had planned to have in 2021 was disrupted for a COVID-related reason
The difference in rescheduling between adults of different vaccination status was also seen in dental care. Only 30 percent of unvaccinated people say they had rescheduled their disrupted dental appointment, compared with 64 percent of vaccinated and boosted people.
The report adds that “Like the national population of all people 50 and older, a large majority (83 percent) of the 1,011 poll respondents said they had been vaccinated. Booster doses were reported by 70 percent of people aged 50-64 who had been vaccinated, and 83 percent of vaccinated people over 65. But 23 percent of people aged 50 to 64, and 11 percent of people over 65, said they are not vaccinated. Unvaccinated people were more likely to be white, to have incomes under $30,000, or to have a high school education or less.”
Jeffrey Kullgren, M.D., associate director of the poll and a health care researcher and associate professor of internal medicine at Michigan Medicine and provides primary care to Veterans at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare system, was quoted in the report saying that “Whether they chose to postpone or their provider did, these patients missed opportunities for preventive care and for early detection and effective management of chronic conditions, not to mention operations and procedures to address a pressing health need. The fact that half or more unvaccinated people have not yet rescheduled those disrupted appointments is especially concerning, because every encounter with a health care provider is also an opportunity to talk about the benefits and safety of COVID vaccination for older adults.”