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Because your voice matters.

UBC Research Study Recruitment: Patient and Provider Experience of Virtual Care in Equity-Deserving Populations: Rooting for a Virtuous Virtual Care

Posted

Deadline: Apply by

Open to National Region

Posted

Are you a health care service user with experience in Virtual Care? Share your experiences and contribute to meaningful research!

Who Can Participate?
You may qualify if you:
• Have participated in at least 5 Virtual Health Care Sessions
• Identify as an Equity-Deserving Person (a person from underserved communities, racial and ethnic minorities, low-income individuals, the 2SLGBTQIA+ community, persons with disabilities and those with low English/French proficiency)
• Are a Canadian service user
• Have an email address for communication

What’s Involved?
• Complete a 10-15 minute short web-based survey about your experiences with Virtual Health Care
• All communication will be conducted via email
• Participants will receive a CAD 15 honorarium as a Tim Horton’s e-gift card by email for their valuable input

Level of Engagement
Collaborate

Eligibility Criteria
Specific health care experiences (please provide details).
You may qualify if you:
• Have participated in at least 5 Virtual Health Care Sessions
• Identify as an Equity-Deserving Person (a person from underserved communities, racial and ethnic minorities, low-income individuals, the 2SLGBTQIA+ community, persons with disabilities and those with low English/French proficiency)
• Are a Canadian service user
• Have an email address for communication

How to Participate?
If you meet the criteria and are interested, please respond via email to nanish01@student.ubc.ca.

The link to the survey and consent form will be sent from a secure UBC hosted email address nanish01@student.ubc.ca . The survey information will be stored in UBC Hosted servers for added security and privacy.

Service User Recruitment here.

Thank you for your time and contribution.

From Our Community

Laura Klein

Clinical Practice Consultant in Fraser Health

Laura Klein

Seeking the patient perspective doesn’t have to be complicated; it simply entails a commitment to ask and listen. Patient advisors not only bring a valuable perspective but also share original ideas and unique skills. Including the patient and family perspective changes the conversation and aligns the team’s focus towards common goals.