EDU 5353 Week 2 digital divide context
Digital divide context
·
What
“dividing factors” might be impacting community members in your context?
Who is impacted by digital inequity?
According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness
(NAMI) (2026) more than 1,900,000 Oklahomans live in communities without enough
mental health professionals, cost was the most prevailing factor for not
receiving treatment, one in five Oklahomans experience a mental illness each
year, and 195,000 adult Oklahomans have serious mental illness.
According to Mack, Whetsell, & Graves (2022) rates
of mental illness in rural areas are like the urban areas but suicide is nearly
twice in rural communities. Barriers to mental health care in rural areas can
be grouped into the following three groups:
Availability: fewer providers to include psychiatrists,
psychologists, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and social workers.
Access: Traveling time, lack of public transportation,
limited private transportation to include reliable vehicle, driver’s license,
fuel and time. Adding to this is insufficient insurance coverage and limited broadband
coverage.
Acceptability: stigma and health literacy issues, lack
of privacy due to interconnected social networks, culturally competent
providers.
The National Rural Health Association (NRHA) (2024) has
recommended support for broadband access, affordable connectivity, Medicare telehealth
flexibilities, reimbursement to providers, enable telehealth adoption of rural health
care, and ease cross-state licensure for providers of rural residents.
I serve as tele health psychiatric
consultant for three rural communities in different counties of Oklahoma. Following
is a table showing demographic, social, and economic information taken from Census
Reporter (n.d.).
|
Town |
Fairfax |
Stroud |
|
|
Population |
5,627 |
1,018 |
2,771 |
|
Square miles |
7.1 |
0.8 |
11.6 |
|
People per square mile |
792 |
1,329.4 |
239.4 |
|
Median age |
35 |
44.5 |
36.6 |
|
Per capita income ($) |
21,630 |
25,092 |
29,318 |
|
Median household income ($) |
43,668 |
39,063 |
54,519 |
|
Poverty or people below poverty
line (%) |
27.5 |
22.9 |
18.3 |
|
Transportation to work (minutes) |
18.8 |
24.4 |
2.8 |
|
Number of households |
1,845 |
396 |
1,055 |
|
Persons per household |
3 |
2.5 |
2.6 |
|
Number of housing units |
2,422 |
586 |
1,267 |
|
Median value of owner-occupied
house units ($) |
90,000 |
53,500 |
120,000 |
|
High school grad or higher education
(%) |
89.9 |
83.4 |
92.2 |
|
Bachelor’s degree or higher education
(%) |
12 |
12.1 |
14.8 |
·
Findings
associated with challenges created by the COVID pandemic relate to your
community?
Due to social distance during the covid-19 pandemic
many adjustments were made to provide health services; to include law adjustments,
reimbursement polices adjustments, and provider practices adjustments. There was
an increase in telehealth encounters of 766 percents in the first three months
of the pandemic. The telehealth services under Medicare grew for both urban and
rural beneficiaries but the rural grew less.
The National Rural Health Association (NRHA) (2024)
had recommended support for broadband access, affordable connectivity, Medicare
telehealth flexibilities, reimbursement to providers, enable telehealth adoption
of rural health care, and ease cross-state licensure for providers of rural
residents
·
What
stands out from this week's readings associated with your context? How
does your community fair with regarding to digital equity?
Gallardo
(2022) talks about the digital divide index (DDI), which is a value from 0 to
100, where 100 indicated the highest digital divide. The DDI is composed of two
scores. One score is the infrastructure/adoption (INFA) score, and the other
score is the socioeconomic (SE) score. The INFA score has four variables:
houses without a computing device, without internet, average download and
average upload speed. The SE score has five variables: population age 65 and older,
population 25 and older with less than high school, individual poverty rate,
noninstitutionalized civilians with a disability, and digital inequality or internet
income ratio measure.
Gallardo
(2022) reported that the digital divide affects the most the rural counties but
minorities in urban areas were affected as well. The most affected were poor,
disabled, older, less educated, and lower labor force participation ones.
According
to Brown (2020) the digital divide is characterized by two problems: one is the
limited and costly infrastructure of internet and the other is the digital
literary of the community.
References
Census Reporter. (n.d.-a). Anadarko, OK. Retrieved from https://censusreporter.org/profiles/16000US4002050-anadarko-ok/
Census Reporter. (n.d.-b). Fairfax, OK. Retrieved from
https://censusreporter.org/profiles/ 6000US4024850-fairfax-ok/
Census Reporter. (n.d.-c). Stroud, OK. Retrieved from https://censusreporter.org/profiles/
6000US4071000-stroud-ok/
Gallardo R. (2022). The State of the Digital Divide in
the United States. Retrieved from: https://pcrd.purdue.edu/the-state-of-the-digital-divide-in-the-united-states/Links
to an external site.
Mack, B., Whetsell, H., Graves, J. A. (2022). National
Rural Health Association Policy Brief. Mental health in rural areas. Retrieved
from https://www.ruralhealth.us/getmedia/cf3c3922-25cb-49a0-bb04-0bad81d634f9/NRHA-Mental-health-in-rural-areas-policy-brief-2022.pdf
National Alliance in Mental Illness. (2025). Mental
Health in Oklahoma. Retrieved from https://www.nami.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Oklahoma-GRPA-Data-Sheet-8.5-x-11-wide.pdf
National Rural Health Association. National Rural Health
Association Policy Brief. Impacts of telehealth on rural health care access.
Retrieved from https://www.ruralhealth.us/nationalruralhealth/media/documents/nrha-impact-of-telehealth-policy-on-rural-health-access-2024.pdf
With the lack of rural hospitals, telehealth is becoming even more important in our rural communities. When people are unable to access digital spaces, then they could lack the ability to access their health information or even see a doctor.
ReplyDeleteDennis,
ReplyDeleteYou are right. I only see patients who are hospitalized through the hospital's equipment/internet. Once the patient leaves the hospital I am not able to follow up with him/her. I am thinking about to providing outpatient services, in a clinic to those communities. It may be a day a week at each place. I am thinking about a call to action for myself.