4.4 Article

Factors influencing health care utilisation among Aboriginal cardiac patients in central Australia: a qualitative study

Journal

BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-83

Keywords

Health care utilisation; Facilitators/barriers to care; Cardiovascular disease; Indigenous; Aboriginal

Funding

  1. NHMRC [402797]
  2. Heart Foundation Indigenous Cardiovascular Fellowship
  3. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT100100312]
  4. Australian Research Council [FT100100312] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Background: Aboriginal Australians suffer from poorer overall health compared to the general Australian population, particularly in terms of cardiovascular disease and prognosis following a cardiac event. Despite such disparities, Aboriginal Australians utilise health care services at much lower rates than the general population. Improving health care utilisation (HCU) among Aboriginal cardiac patients requires a better understanding of the factors that constrain or facilitate use. The study aimed to identify ecological factors influencing health care utilisation (HCU) for Aboriginal cardiac patients, from the time of their cardiac event to 6-12 months post-event, in central Australia. Methods: This qualitative descriptive study was guided by an ecological framework. A culturally-sensitive illness narrative focusing on Aboriginal cardiac patients' typical journey guided focus groups and semi-structured interviews with Aboriginal cardiac patients, non-cardiac community members, health care providers and community researchers. Analysis utilised a thematic conceptual matrix and mixed coding method. Themes were categorised into Predisposing, Enabling, Need and Reinforcing factors and identified at Individual, Interpersonal, Primary Care and Hospital System levels. Results: Compelling barriers to HCU identified at the Primary Care and Hospital System levels included communication, organisation and racism. Individual level factors related to HCU included language, knowledge of illness, perceived need and past experiences. Given these individual and health system barriers patients were reliant on utilising alternate family-level supports at the Interpersonal level to enable their journey. Conclusion: Aboriginal cardiac patients face significant barriers to HCU, resulting in sub-optimal quality of care, placing them at risk for subsequent cardiovascular events and negative health outcomes. To facilitate HCU amongst Aboriginal people, strategies must be implemented to improve communication on all levels and reduce systemic barriers operating within the health system.

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