Article

Access to primary mental health care for hard-to-reach groups: from 'silent suffering' to 'making it work'

Details

Citation

Kovandzic M, Chew-Graham C, Reeve J, Edwards S, Peters S, Edge D, Aseem S, Gask L & Dowrick C (2011) Access to primary mental health care for hard-to-reach groups: from 'silent suffering' to 'making it work'. Social Science and Medicine, 72 (5), pp. 763-772. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.11.027

Abstract
Equitable access to primary care for people with common mental health problems in the UK remains problematic. The experiences of people from hard-to-reach groups offer important insights into barriers to accessing care. In this study, we report on secondary analysis of qualitative data generated within seven previously-reported studies. Thirty-three of ninety-two available transcripts were re-analysed using a new heuristic of access, generated to frame narrative-based comparative case analysis. The remaining transcripts were used to triangulate the findings via a process of collaborative analysis between a secondary researcher, naïve to research findings of the original studies, and primary researchers involved in data generation and analysis within the original studies. This method provided a rich body of 'fine grain' insights into the ways in which problem formulation, help-seeking, use of services and perceptions of service quality are interlinked in a recursive and socially embedded matrix of inequitable access to primary mental health care. The findings indicate both extensive commonalities between experiences of people from different 'hard-to-reach groups', and considerable diversity within each group. An idiographic generalisation and aggregation of this variety of experiences points to one main common facilitator (communicated availability of acceptable mental health services) and two main common barriers (lack of effective information and multiple forms of stigma) to equitable access to primary mental health care. We conclude that there is a need to provide local care that is pluralistic, adaptive, holistic, resonant and socially conscious in order to ensure that equitable access to mental health services can become a reality.

Keywords
Mental health; Hard-to-reach groups; Access; Primary care; UK

Journal
Social Science and Medicine: Volume 72, Issue 5

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Liverpool
Publication date31/03/2011
Publication date online31/12/2010
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28128
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0277-9536
eISSN0277-9536

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