The digital divide: Amplifying health inequalities for people with severe mental illness in the time of COVID-19

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Abstract

During COVID-19, health provision and information resources have been increasingly provided via digital means (e.g. websites, apps) and this will become a standard practice beyond the pandemic. People with severe mental illness face profound health inequalities (e.g. a >20-year mortality gap). Digital exclusion puts this population at risk of heightened or compounded inequalities. This has been referred to as the 'digital divide'. For any new digital means introduced in clinical practice to augment healthcare service provision, issues of accessibility, acceptability and usability should be addressed by researchers and developers early in the design phase, and prior to full implementation, to prevent digital exclusion.

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APA

Spanakis, P., Peckham, E., Mathers, A., Shiers, D., & Gilbody, S. (2021, October 23). The digital divide: Amplifying health inequalities for people with severe mental illness in the time of COVID-19. British Journal of Psychiatry. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.2021.56

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