Understanding Unmet Care Needs of Rural Older Adults with Chronic Health Conditions: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (a)
- What are the perceived unmet healthcare needs of community-dwelling older adults in rural South Australia?
- (b)
- What are the challenges to care access and facilitators of health-service utilization among rural older adults?
2. Theoretical Consideration for Healthcare Needs and Services Utilisation by Rural Older Adults
3. Research Design, Setting, and Methods
3.1. Research Team and Reflexivity
3.2. Participants
3.3. Data Collection
3.4. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Characteristics of Participants
4.2. Summary of Major Themes
4.3. Unmet Needs
4.4. Chronic Disease Management
“I do think record keeping on my health could be better. My personal record is up here, but it should be instantly available to all doctors anywhere……it simpler for a doctor to hone in on exactly what he’s trying to see based on what he’s thinking might be the problem with this patient.”(Older participant 7, male)
“Everyone’s doing something different, no one’s working together with a clear plan of how the system or service is supposed to be working….. even just in between doctors, doctors will want to do their own sort of thing. The only way we can make it work and make it work really well is to make sure we’re super organised.”(GP2, male, 25–35 years)
4.5. Specialist Care Services
“Then in terms of visiting specialists, there’s often long waits to get into them for these more complicated conditions, if the specialist even comes up to the area as well and being three hours away from Adelaide, often people don’t want to travel, or they can’t afford to travel or they’re too sick to travel. If they can’t get into the specialist, we end up doing the care which is quite complex and complicated.”(GP1, male, 36–46 years)
“My heart condition has required operations and stents and all sorts of things which—that’s a specialist care field and you’ve got to go to Adelaide to access that. If I go to make an appointment, they say, oh well, it’s six weeks. In six weeks, the problem’s either a lot worse or it’s gone away.”(64-year-old man, participant 5)
4.6. Psychological Distress
“Yeah, we just don’t have the time to do a DASS-21 or a DASS-42 or something like that…. But for a standard GP consult in 15 min, there’s normally so many medical conditions, acute and chronic. Even if it’s just a chronic disease consultation, that person always brings in some acute problems as well.”(GP1)
4.7. Formal Caregiving
“We need to put in personal care, because when we—people need to shower, they need to look after their skin integrity. Older people become incontinent; how do we manage that? So somewhere in there, I’d like to see personal care and transport put in.”(Participant 26, female, Soscial worker, 25–35 years)
4.8. Challenges to Healthcare Access
4.9. Workforce Shortages
4.10. Continuity of Care
“Very hard to see the GP that you want to see. I had to see a registrar when my voice went strange, and he told me it was laryngitis, and it was lung cancer. So, I was a bit annoyed, but we all make mistakes, don’t we?……but it’s nice to see your own doctor who knows you. Because he knows me, he would have known that I’d lost a bit of weight and he knew as soon as he saw me in the supermarket that something was wrong. So, if I’d seen him, maybe things would have been a bit different, but who knows?”(Participant 9)
4.11. Transportation
4.12. Facilitators of Health Services Utilization
4.13. Health Self-Efficacy
“I’ve been involved in a number of health programs, reaching out for the community. Stress management, stop smoking programs. One time, weight loss and because of my awareness of—it’s the importance of maintaining good health, I think that’s sort of helpful in my situation. It keeps me focused that if there’s something that I feel is not right, I like to get it checked out.”(Participant 12)
4.14. Social Support
4.15. Positive Attitudes of Service Providers
“I think they’re doing a—I value the doctors who own the practice, I value their experience. If I can, I’ll see them.”(Participant 1, 66-year-old man)
4.16. Suggested Interventions to Address Access Barriers
“We’ve got to attract them to the country, and we’ve got to retain them in the country…If you’re a doctor in the country, you’ve got an additional cost associated with educating your kids, if you want them to be privately educated, and accessing additional training is all much more difficult if you’re a doctor in the country. So, I think the answer is to recruit more doctors to the country”(Participant 13)
“We’ve got to consider other options……why can’t we attract doctors from abroad? we’ve had different—doctors from different countries in our local town and we’ve found them to be just as good as the Australian doctors”(Participant 7)
“I think yeah for a medical clinic or any medical service to be successful in providing good chronic disease care, both physical and mental health issues, the whole clinic or the whole service needs to be working together and on the same page. There’s no point… We’ve seen it. There’s no point where the doctors will be doing one thing, the receptionist will be doing another thing, and the nurses will be doing one thing. Everyone’s doing something different, no one’s working together with a clear plan of how the system or service is supposed to be working. So, certainly we inherited a very broken system”(GP 2)
5. Discussion
5.1. Theoretical Perspective
5.2. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | ||
---|---|---|
Older Adults (N = 20) | Healthcare Providers (N = 15) | |
Mean age (years) | 63.65 | |
Age range | 60–87 | 25–35 = 9, 36–46 = 4, 47–57 = 2 |
Sex | Male = 9 | Male = 5 |
Female = 11 | Female = 10 | |
Professional background | - | General practitioners = 2 |
- | Mental health Nurses = 2 | |
Social Workers = 7 | ||
General Nurses = 4 |
Themes | Patient Quote | Provider Quote |
---|---|---|
Unmet needs | ||
Chronic disease management | “I have type 2 diabetes, lupus and stage 4 lung and brain cancer…..Every three weeks for four treatments and then after that it’s every three weeks for 24 treatments, which I’m trying to have up here in Berri, I hope.” (70-year-old woman) Because the dollar return per minute on a short consult is higher than the dollar return per minute on a long consult. So, they want more of the short consults because it raises more money, and I thought, what’s the object of the practice of medicine here? Is it to raise more money, hence we want shorter appointments, or is it to provide a level of care that’s going to meet the need of the patient? (75-year-old man) | “The other thing with chronic conditions, people with chronic conditions need, I think they really need the doctor to go the extra mile to do all their preventative care unrelated to their other conditions as well.” (GP) “Often, almost everyone’s got a shopping list of six to eight things for 15 min, which means two minutes a problem with a quick hello as well. So, you’ve got less than two minutes a problem.” (GP) “I think yeah for a medical clinic or any medical service to be successful in providing good chronic disease care, both physical and mental health issues, the whole clinic or the whole service needs to be working together and on the same page. There’s no point… We’ve seen it. There’s no point where the doctors will be doing one thing, the receptionist will be doing another thing, and the nurses will be doing one thing” |
Specialist care services | “The obvious other one is access to the level of medical care that you need. My heart condition has required operations and stents and all sorts of things which—that’s a specialist care field and you’ve got to go to Adelaide to access that. So, there’s something about the level of medical care not being accessible locally but I don’t think we’ve got the population to justify everything for everyone. We do need to understand that’s one of the costs of living in the country.” (64-year-old man) “It’s seeing specialists, because you’ve got to travel down to Adelaide. That’s over 200—about 200 and something kilometres, and organising all of that.” (65-year-old woman) | “if we can keep the physical and emotional health quite good with the lack of specialists and lack of other health care up here, it’s a huge win for people.” (GP) “I’ve had a recent situation with someone in a regional town. They needed a significant amount of support and the doctor basically said well you need to put your wife into aged care, and you need to move to the city so you can get the support that you need.” (social worker) |
Psychological distress | “I think there was a depression associated with that that wasn’t treated at the time. Now, I’ve got ongoing management of those, which is both a combination of local and Adelaide-based treatments.” (Man in his 60 s). “I used to worry so much about things but that made me sick so you learn how to just—I don’t know, just—you’ve got to cope, somehow you cope. I suppose at 65, you don’t worry about the little stuff so much. Because the main thing at this age is your health.” (Woman in her 60 s) “I haven’t considered that the anxiety has been long lived. It just might be because of a situation that’s arisen. Then we can resolve it within a very short period of time.” (70-year-old man) | “Yeah, we just don’t have the time to do a DASS-21 or a DASS-42 or something like that. The nurses in some of the health assessments will do a geriatric depression scale, or mini mental state exam or something like that, because they get given 45 min. But for a standard GP consult in 15 min, there’s normally so many medical conditions, acute and chronic. Even if it’s just a chronic disease consultation, that person always brings in some acute problems as well.” (GP) “time is a huge one, usually for proper consultant for mental health, you often need at least 20, 30 min, and that’s doing it fairly superficially, and not doing a great deal more.” (GP) |
Formal caregiving | “There’s just things around the home that I’m looking at whether I can get support with those. That’s with things like the bathroom cleaning and general cleaning………Now, with something like cooking tea, my back can be tight by the time I finish cooking tea, and yeah, so I’m just seeing if I qualify for anything. Otherwise, we’ll get somebody in to just clean periodically and do drop-ins once a month” (Man in his 70 s). | “I also see that somewhere, we need to put in personal care, because when we—people need to shower, they need to look after their skin integrity. Older people become incontinent; how do we manage that?” (Social worker) “Talking from a perspective of community services under Commonwealth Home Support Program, the basic care needs really commence with domestic assistance and social support, respite for the carer, shopping assistance for those very basic needs which become the first they become evident when people are wanting to stay at home and their physical health, whether it be through chronic condition or issues of ageing, prevents them from doing those activities themselves for the long-term.” (Community health nurse) |
Access challenges | ||
Workforce shortages | “Doctors—the hours of our medical staff—our healthcare providers generally, the hours that they’re working are ridiculous. I don’t understand how they can operate safely. If you put that degree of work pressure onto other professions, they would fold. If we made our air traffic controllers work like our doctors, we’d have planes crashing often. So, I just think we expect too much of our doctors and why? Because we haven’t got enough of them. We need more doctors.” (Woman in her 70 s). “There is certainly not enough doctors in this place. That’s the simple truth of it.” (80-year-old woman). | “But then just one of the big ones it’s just access, because there’s just not enough general practitioners to cope with the load. There’s not enough psychiatrists, not enough people in mental health teams, there’s not enough psychologists, not enough counsellors, like access is difficult.” (GP) “I think it comes down a lot to, once again, there’s a staff shortage. We don’t have enough support workers. Certainly, when I listen to the support workers and they’ll talk about their workload. Some of them now are only finishing at six o’clock at night, because that’s what they need to do because there’s not enough workers to provide the services that are required” (nurse) |
Continuity of care | “I’ve only been here for years myself, so I haven’t got what I would call a regular doctor.” (73-year old man) “What I want is I want one doctor—just one—who doesn’t have to be the world’s best doctor but I want them to know about me. I don’t want every time I go to the doctor to have to explain this and this and this and they get on the computer and they—oh yes, I see.” (Man in his 60 s) “It’s the change of doctors you have all the time. It’s all right if you have the same doctor, because when you have different doctors, I don’t think they should read your notes.” (65-year-old woman). | “Well, I think since we’ve started doing the chronic disease management a lot better and a lot more structured, you get better. You can actually stave off a lot of chronic diseases worsening by just dealing with them regularly, which is just been a major change that we’ve done, going from ad hoc appointments to some really structured follow up the physical side are actually seeing a lot of better health outcomes for our patients.” (GP) “So, yeah, I’d agree that if you’re doing good, if you’ve got good continuity of care, you can normally pick up when someone’s mental health has dropped off. Even if we see them four times a year, it’s enough.” |
Transportation | “I’m not allowed to drive at the moment due to the brain cancers. I only drive locally anyway, so if I need to go to Berri or further, I need to get friends to take me.” (Woman in her 70 s) I possibly could but I probably don’t feel confident to drive after I’ve had the injection in the eye. | “We have a lot of people with significant issues that just can’t leave home, either physically or emotionally, which is huge, up here as well, because you’ve been three hours away from Adelaide. Where if your health is terrible, you’re a long way from a tertiary centre and you just can’t access certain things.” (GP) “As people get older, they’re not confident driving long distances, they often have to go to Adelaide for medical appointments, or to Port Pirie, and transport becomes a big thing. They can’t get onto a bus, there’s no bus services available.” (Social worker) |
Waiting time for appointment | “ if you need to go see a podiatrist or you need to go see a dietitian, the waiting lists are long, so long. Sometimes I’ve been—you have specialists that come up to the Riverland and a lot of the times, they’ll recommend you; it’s easier to—and quicker if you just go to Adelaide to see them, rather than waiting to get something up here.” (Woman in her 70 s). “You have to wait a fair while to see a specialist, like I see an eye specialist and it’s pretty hard. I book three or four months in advance for an annual appointment.” (73-year-old woman) | “The role that I’m in now, which is supporting people with ongoing chronic conditions, sometimes they might have five chronic conditions at the same time, including rare genetic disorders. If people had assistance earlier, the outcomes could be a lot better than what I’m seeing every day in my work. Just the massive barriers for people actually getting access to the services that they do need.” (Nurse) “Then in terms of visiting specialists, there’s often long waits to get into them for these more complicated conditions.” (GP) |
Facilitators | ||
Self-efficacy | “Well the physical things—I do lots of physical exercise and try and keep myself very fit. I do Pilates, I walk, I do aerobics—so I’ve been trying to fix my body myself, yeah. When I need to see a doctor, I go for appointment.” (61-year-old woman). I’ve been involved in a number of health programs, reaching out for the community. Stress management, stop smoking programs. One time, weight loss and because of my awareness of—it’s the importance of maintaining good health, I think that’s sort of helpful in my situation. It keeps me focussed that if there’s something that I feel is not right, I like to get it checked out. (72-year-old man) | “I’m relatively new into the health space, I’ve only been here 12 months, and I still don’t feel confident in navigating certain parts of it. I’m coming from an educated background, with the ability to advocate for myself if I need it. A lot of the clients that I see, actually don’t have that.” (Social worker) “The people who are proactive often get a better outcome because they’re prepared to take responsibility for their own needs, and they’re prepared to ask for help. Their prepared to find out what needs to be done.” (Nurse) |
Social support | “They are accessible but because of the glaucoma I’m having injections in one eye and I have a brother in Berri who will come and get me and take me home again. Also, a brother-in-law who will come and get me and take me home.” (78-year-old woman) | “Family support is also wonderful, but a lot of people in Port Pirie—and Mel will attest to this—they go into hospital, they don’t even have someone who can feed their cat or go and get them a bag of clothing because they just don’t have a support network.” (Social worker) |
Positive service provider attitude | “I’ve been quite happy with the reception of the nurses and the reception staff because they’re very polite [here]. Even at Berri they’re quite good too, the specialist.” (Woman in her 70 s) | “sometimes, we—depending on risk, we might need to transport ourselves. So we don’t promote that, but we talk about it as a team and if we need to do it, we will do it….. Again, not really our business, but we can’t sort of ignore that so we then reopen another referral and help them navigate that whole process” (Social worker) |
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Share and Cite
Asante, D.; McLachlan, C.S.; Pickles, D.; Isaac, V. Understanding Unmet Care Needs of Rural Older Adults with Chronic Health Conditions: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043298
Asante D, McLachlan CS, Pickles D, Isaac V. Understanding Unmet Care Needs of Rural Older Adults with Chronic Health Conditions: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043298
Chicago/Turabian StyleAsante, Dennis, Craig S. McLachlan, David Pickles, and Vivian Isaac. 2023. "Understanding Unmet Care Needs of Rural Older Adults with Chronic Health Conditions: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043298
APA StyleAsante, D., McLachlan, C. S., Pickles, D., & Isaac, V. (2023). Understanding Unmet Care Needs of Rural Older Adults with Chronic Health Conditions: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043298