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Older adults rapidly adopted technology for healthcare, known as digital health, during the COVID-19 pandemic. Older adults are increasingly using telehealth, smartphone apps, and other digital health technologies to reduce barriers to care, maintain patient-provider communication, and promote disease self-management. Yet, many healthcare professionals have maintained outdated beliefs rooted in societal ageism that digital health and older adults are incompatible. As a result, older adults have been disproportionally excluded from health services and clinical trials that use digital health relative to their younger counterparts. In this commentary, we urge all healthcare disciplines to challenge ageist beliefs and practices that have contributed to the "digital health divide" among older patients. We provide examples of evidence-based strategies and current scientific initiatives that can promote digital health inclusion in research, clinical practice, and training. By achieving digital health inclusion, we can increase access, provide preventative and comprehensive care, and decrease healthcare costs for older patients.
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Mace et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dd42aa7808b00a4799bd4d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/tbm/ibac070
Ryan A. Mace
Massachusetts General Hospital
Meghan Mattos
University of Virginia
Ana‐Maria Vranceanu
Harvard University
Translational Behavioral Medicine
Harvard University
Massachusetts General Hospital
University of Virginia
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