P-2100. Understanding barriers and facilitators for access to care in populations in Central California with Coccidioidomycosis (Valley fever) Meningitis using Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research!
Uday Chauhan, Rayne E Shepard, Nancy J Burke, Geetha Sivasubramanian

TL;DR
This study explores challenges in treating Valley fever meningitis in Central California, focusing on barriers like travel, communication, and costs, and suggests patient navigators could improve care.
Contribution
The study applies the CFIR framework to identify specific barriers and facilitators for CM care in a socioeconomically disadvantaged population.
Findings
Patients lacked understanding of Valley Fever and lifelong therapy, leading to poor adherence.
Structural barriers like travel time and interpreter shortages worsened outcomes.
Financial burdens and insurance issues disrupted treatment and caused rehospitalizations.
Abstract
Long-term management of coccidioidal meningitis (CM) is challenging due to the need for lifelong antifungal therapy, frequent treatment failure, and barriers to follow-up among socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. These issues contribute to poor outcomes such as recurrent hospitalizations and shunt complications. This study aims to identify key barriers and facilitators to CM care in Central California using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), to inform future patient navigation interventions. Consolidated Framework For Implementation Research (CFIR) The diagram depicts the five interacting CFIR domains—Intervention, Outer Setting, Inner Setting, Individuals, and Process—with the constructs listed beneath each. Together, these multilevel factors shape the adoption, execution, and sustainability of evidence-based interventions. Adapted from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFungal Infections and Studies · Bacterial Infections and Vaccines · Antifungal resistance and susceptibility
