4.6 Article

Young adults' needs when seeking first-line healthcare: A grounded theory design

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263963

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. PYU [RO-720671]
  2. Region Ostergotland LV [FORSS-749601]
  3. Medical Research Council of Southeast Sweden ET [RO-534061]
  4. Region Ostergotland

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This study explores the perception of young adults in seeking first-line healthcare. The main concern of young adults when seeking healthcare is whether their worries are taken seriously. The process includes becoming aware of, verifying, communicating, and receiving an opinion about one's symptoms. Clearer symptoms require less communication, while unclear symptoms require different behavioral approaches and healthcare know-how. Young adults want to learn how to self-manage their symptoms and prior healthcare experience can influence the healthcare-seeking process. The study suggests that healthcare providers should focus on the final step of giving medical opinion and provide extra support for future self-care.
Background Healthcare outpatient visits have increased in recent years, and young adults are often given as an explanatory factor for many avoidable visits. Objective The objective of this study was to explore how young adults perceive seeking first-line healthcare. Design and setting The study utilized a grounded theory design with data collection at primary healthcare centres and emergency departments in southeast Sweden. Method Data were collected during individual interviews and patient observations with subsequent interviews during the years 2017-2018. The analysis was performed using grounded theory. Results The main concern when young adults are seeking healthcare is that their worries are taken seriously. It is a four-part process: becoming aware of, verifying, communicating, and receiving an opinion about one's symptoms. The process includes external factors, clarity of symptoms, behavioural approaches, healthcare know-how, enabling self-management, and prior healthcare experience(s). When communicating symptoms, the clearer the symptoms, the less there needs to be communicated. When symptoms are unclear, the importance of different behavioural approaches and healthcare know-how increases. When receiving a medical opinion about symptoms, young adults want to learn how to self-manage their symptoms. Depending on previous healthcare experience, the healthcare visit can either harm or help the patient in their healthcare-seeking process. Conclusion This study reflects several insights in the healthcare-seeking process from a young adult perspective. Based on the results, we suggest that healthcare providers focus on the final step in the healthcare-seeking process when giving their medical opinion about symptoms. Having extra minutes to give support for future self-care regardless of diagnosis could increase positive healthcare experiences and increase future self-care among young adults.

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