Health Care Utilization and Care-seeking Behavior Among Vulnerabilized Sexual Minority Women: A Social-ecological Approach.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved Pub Date : 2024-01-01
Aimee K Huang, Megan Nguyen, Danielle German, Kamila Alexander, Brittany M Charlton, Jennifer L Glick
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Abstract

Sexual minority women (SMW) experience worse health than their heterosexual counterparts but have largely been omitted from health services research. To address this gap, we conducted 25 semi-structured, in-depth interviews with SMW. Transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis, and findings were organized using a modified socioecological framework. Key themes at each socioecological level include (1) structural: stigma, sociocultural norms, health infrastructure; (2) organizational: stigma, patient-provider relationship, hours and location, linkage to care and co-location of services; (3) interpersonal: stigma and social support; (4) individual: internalized stigma, self-efficacy, socioeconomic status, health literacy, and intersecting identities. Stigma is the central theme affecting vulnerabilized SMW's experiences accessing care. Anti-stigma initiatives and factors that lead to personal resilience and can mitigate care access barriers were identified at each level. Interventions should focus on building inclusive policies/infrastructure and using SMW's unique social networks to empower and improve care access and health outcomes among vulnerabilized SMW.

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弱势性少数群体妇女的医疗保健利用率和求医行为:社会生态学方法。
与异性恋女性相比,性少数群体女性(SMW)的健康状况更差,但在医疗服务研究中却被忽略了。为了填补这一空白,我们对性少数群体女性进行了 25 次半结构式深度访谈。我们使用主题分析法对访谈记录进行了分析,并使用修改后的社会生态学框架对调查结果进行了整理。每个社会生态层面的关键主题包括:(1)结构性:污名化、社会文化规范、卫生基础设施;(2)组织性:污名化、患者与医疗服务提供者的关系、时间和地点、与医疗服务的联系以及服务的共同地点;(3)人际关系:污名化和社会支持;(4)个人:内化的污名化、自我效能、社会经济地位、健康知识以及交叉身份。污名化是影响弱势的法定最低年龄妇女获得护理的核心主题。在每个层面上都确定了反污名化倡议和可增强个人复原力并减少获得护理障碍的因素。干预措施应侧重于建立包容性政策/基础设施,并利用法定最低工资者独特的社会网络来增强其权能,改善弱势法定最低工资者获得护理的机会和健康成果。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
154
期刊介绍: The journal has as its goal the dissemination of information on the health of, and health care for, low income and other medically underserved communities to health care practitioners, policy makers, and community leaders who are in a position to effect meaningful change. Issues dealt with include access to, quality of, and cost of health care.
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