• Inequitable Access : MyHealth adoption favours women, Spanish nationals, and wealthier users, leaving older adults, migrants, and rural residents behind. • Wealth Bias : Digital health use skews toward higher-income groups, disproving assumptions that tech alone ensures equity. • COVID-19 Surge : Pandemic-driven platform growth didn’t reduce disparities—marginalised groups still lagged. • Key Barriers : Digital literacy, language, and rural infrastructure hinder access, requiring systemic solutions. • Call to Action : Policies must prioritise inclusive design, multilingual support, and rural investment to close gaps. The rapid expansion of digital health technologies during and after the COVID-19 pandemic has reshaped how individuals access healthcare services. While these innovations promise greater efficiency and reach, questions remain about their equitable uptake across different population groups. This study investigates the adoption and sustained use of MyHealth, a digital health platform introduced by the Catalan National Health System in 2015 and widely integrated into primary care delivery. Drawing on longitudinal administrative data covering around 80% of the Catalan population (9.46 million individuals) and over 727 million healthcare records from 2015 to 2023, we analyse patterns of digital engagement using survival analysis and microeconometric modelling. Our findings reveal persistent inequalities in both initial adoption and long-term usage. Engagement is higher among women, Spanish nationals, and individuals from higher-income areas. At the same time, older adults, migrants, and rural residents are significantly less likely to adopt or sustain use of the platform. These disparities were particularly pronounced during the pandemic's peak, when digital health use surged. Concentration indices confirm a clear pro-wealth bias in digital health engagement, challenging the assumption that digitalisation automatically enhances equity. Despite the platform’s wide availability and integration into the healthcare system, structural barriers, including digital literacy, cultural and linguistic accessibility, and infrastructure, continue to shape patterns of use. This study presents one of the first comprehensive, large-scale assessments of digital health inequality in Europe. It highlights the need for targeted, evidence-based policies to ensure that digital health transformation supports rather than undermines equity goals in healthcare access and delivery.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Toni Mora
Catia Nicodemo
David Roche
Health Policy and Technology
Brunel University of London
Universitat Internacional de Catalunya
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Mora et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b2573196eeacc4fcec5c8a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlpt.2026.101184