| Literature DB >> 28462330 |
Stephanie B Ewart1, Julia Bocking1, Brenda Happell1, Chris Platania-Phung1, Robert Stanton2.
Abstract
People with mental illness have higher rates of physical health problems and consequently live significantly shorter lives. This issue is not yet viewed as a national health priority and research about mental health consumer views on accessing physical health care is lacking. The aim of this study is to explore the experience of mental health consumers in utilizing health services for physical health needs. Qualitative exploratory design was utilized. Semistructured focus groups were held with 31 consumer participants. Thematic analysis revealed that three main themes emerged: scarcity of physical health care, with problems accessing diagnosis, advice or treatment for physical health problems; disempowerment due to scarcity of physical health care; and tenuous empowerment describing survival resistance strategies utilized. Mental health consumers were concerned about physical health and the nonresponsive health system. A specialist physical health nurse consultant within mental health services should potentially redress this gap in health care provision.Entities:
Keywords: consumer participation; health care access; mental health nursing; mental health services; physical health; stigma
Year: 2016 PMID: 28462330 PMCID: PMC5342294 DOI: 10.1177/2333393616631679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Qual Nurs Res ISSN: 2333-3936
Figure 1.Thematic structure of research findings.
Note. The main themes are scarcity of physical health care, disempowerment, and tenuous empowerment. Subthemes are presented below each heading.