Observational cross-sectional study of the association of poor broadband provision with demographic and health outcomes: the Wolverhampton Digital ENablement (WODEN) programme.
Date
2022-11-01Type
Cross Sectional Study; Observational Study; Peer-Reviewed PublicationKeyword
COVID-19; Epidemiology; General medicine; Health policy; Health services administration; Health service management; Organisational development; Medical economics; Ethnicity; Geography; Social support; Wolverhampton Digital ENablement programme (WODEN); Broadband provision; Wolverhampton; Health outcomesJournal Title
BMJ OpenVolume
12Issue
11Begin page
e065709Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objectives: The association between impaired digital provision, access and health outcomes has not been systematically studied. The Wolverhampton Digital ENablement programme (WODEN) is a multiagency collaborative approach to determine and address digital factors that may impact on health and social care in a single deprived multiethnic health economy. The objective of this study is to determine the association between measurable broadband provision and demographic and health outcomes in a defined population. Design: An observational cross-sectional whole local population-level study with cohorts defined according to broadband provision. Setting/participants: Data for all residents of the City of Wolverhampton, totalling 269 785 residents. Primary outcomes: Poor broadband provision is associated with variation in demographics and with increased comorbidity and urgent care needs. Results: Broadband provision was measured using the Broadband Infrastructure Index (BII) in 158 City localities housing a total of 269 785 residents. Lower broadband provision as determined by BII was associated with younger age (p<0.001), white ethnic status (p<0.001), lesser deprivation as measured by Index of Multiple Deprivation (p<0.001), a higher number of health comorbidities (p<0.001) and more non-elective urgent events over 12 months (p<0.001). Conclusion: Local municipal and health authorities are advised to consider the variations in broadband provision within their locality and determine equal distribution both on a geographical basis but also against demographic, health and social data to determine equitable distribution as a platform for equitable access to digital resources for their residents.Citation
Philp F, Faux-Nightingale A, Bateman J, Clark H, Johnson O, Klaire V, Nevill A, Parry E, Warren K, Pandyan A, Singh BM. Observational cross-sectional study of the association of poor broadband provision with demographic and health outcomes: the Wolverhampton Digital ENablement (WODEN) programme. BMJ Open. 2022 Nov 1;12(11):e065709. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-065709. PMID: 36319188.Publisher Link
https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/11/e065709Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United StatesCollections
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