| Literature DB >> 27912783 |
Patrick O'Donnell1, Edel Tierney2, Austin O'Carroll3, Diane Nurse4, Anne MacFarlane2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The involvement of patients and the public in healthcare has grown significantly in recent decades and is documented in health policy documents internationally. Many benefits of involving these groups in primary care planning have been reported. However, these benefits are rarely felt by those considered marginalised in society and they are often excluded from participating in the process of planning primary care. It has been recommended to employ suitable approaches, such as co-operative and participatory initiatives, to enable marginalised groups to highlight their priorities for care.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Equity; Hard to reach; Marginalised groups; Participatory research; Patient and public involvement (PPI); Primary healthcare; Vulnerable groups
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27912783 PMCID: PMC5135741 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-016-0487-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Study setting
| The Partnership for Health Equity (PHE) is an innovative collaboration which engages medical educators, researchers, clinicians and health service planners from across Ireland in collaboration to work on projects seeking to improve healthcare for marginalised groups. The current partners are the University of Limerick Graduate Entry Medical School, the North Dublin City General Practice Training programme and the Health Service Executive (HSE) Social Inclusion Division. The aim of the partnership is to improve healthcare for marginalised groups by conducting relevant research, by educating future healthcare professionals and by directly providing primary care to marginalised groups. A key feature of the PHE is that research is planned with all partners and research findings are used to inform the development of services, with a focus on priorities for action by the HSE – thereby making real differences in the day-to-day healthcare experiences of patients from marginalised groups across the country. |
| Limerick City was recognised as the most deprived local authority area in the country in 2014, with 28% unemployment and above average rates for all major causes of mortality (cardiovascular and respiratory disease, cancer, injury) [ |
| The Primary Care Team of interest was being established by the HSE and local general practitioners (GPs) in a one of the most deprived areas in the city, with a number of homeless hostels and a high migrant population. The PCT was to consist primarily of a physiotherapist, an occupational therapist, public health nurse (PHN), GPs and allied health professionals. |
Irish primary care context
| To access primary care in Ireland a patient must attend a GP and, if required, be referred to relevant members of the PCT. Patients are required to pay out of pocket to see the GP (cost up to €60 per visit) unless they have a medical card. Applications for this medical card are means tested and the onus is on the patient to find a GP to sign the application form, thereby agreeing to provide care for that patient and to add them to their patient list. This implies that accessing healthcare in the community for low income patients is dependent mainly on a GP accepting a patient’s application. Patients who have been unable to find a GP can apply to the HSE to be assigned to a GP. This medical card covers the cost of visiting the GP and most of the cost of prescription medications. Certain homeless services have access to an ‘emergency medical card’ which allows staff to procure medical care for clients in urgent situations. When a patient with a medical card requires investigations or consultant clinics in public hospitals, there is usually a long waiting time [ |
PLA techniques
| Flexible brainstorming | Fast and creative approach using materials, images and objects to generate information and ideas about accessing primary care |
| Card sort | An exercise in organising and thematically arranging ideas generated in the flexible brainstorming |
| Direct ranking | A democratic and transparent process where each stakeholder/participant indicated their priorities or preferences for improving primary care provision |
Fig. 1PLA chart after flexible brainstorming
Overview of marginalised group participants
| Participant group | Number of participants | PLA session type | No. of participants who attended more than one PLA session |
|---|---|---|---|
| Migrants | 3 | 3 × focus groups | 2 |
| Homeless people | 6 | 3 × focus groups | 2 |
| Traveller health advocates | 2 | 3 × focus groups | 2 |
| Drug users | 3 | 1 × interview | n/a |
| Sex workers | 3 | 1 × interview | n/a |
| Young mothers | 4 | 3 × focus groups | 4 |
| Gender: Female | 15 | ||
| Male | 6 | ||
| Age average | 31 years | ||
| Range | 19–51 years |
Fig. 2Overview of themes
Priorities for action across the participant groups
| Priority Issue | Identified by | Specific solutions suggested to address the priority |
|---|---|---|
| Home | • Travellers | • Need satisfactory accommodation for any effective primary care engagement to happen |
| Two-tier system | • Young mothers | • Need for flexibility around eligibility and referral criteria for primary care services |
| Healthcare encounters | • Migrants | • Better communication in primary care, including availability of trained interpreters |
| Complex health needs | • Young mothers | • Improved knowledge of and availability of community mental health services |