Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city

Abstract Background This study examined access to health care in an occupational context in an urban city of India. Many people migrate from rural areas to cities, often across Indian states, for employment prospects. The purpose of the study is to explore the barriers to accessing health care among...

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Main Authors: Maija Santalahti, Kumar Sumit, Mikko Perkiö
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05482-1
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spelling doaj-f173d698c65940e1bb4630dddd76df262020-11-25T03:25:50ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-07-012011710.1186/s12913-020-05482-1Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian cityMaija Santalahti0Kumar Sumit1Mikko Perkiö2Master of Social Sciences, Social Policy, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere UniversityPrasanna School of Public Health, Manipal Academy of Higher EducationSenior Research Fellow, Global Health and Development, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere UniversityAbstract Background This study examined access to health care in an occupational context in an urban city of India. Many people migrate from rural areas to cities, often across Indian states, for employment prospects. The purpose of the study is to explore the barriers to accessing health care among a vulnerable group – internal migrants working in the construction sector in Manipal, Karnataka. Understanding the lay workers’ accounts of access to health services can help to comprehend the diversity of factors that hinder access to health care. Methods Individual semi-structured interviews involving 15 migrant construction workers were conducted. The study applied theory-guided content analysis to investigate access to health services among the construction workers. The adductive analysis combined deductive and inductive approaches with the aim of verifying the existing barrier theory in a vulnerable context and further developing the health care access barrier theory. Results This study’s result is a revised version of the health care access barriers model, including the dimension of trust. Three known health care access barriers – financial, cognitive and structural, as well as the new barrier (distrust in public health care services), were identified among migrant construction workers in a city context in Karnataka, India. Conclusions Further qualitative research on vulnerable groups would produce a more comprehensive account of access to health care. The socioeconomic status behind access to health care, as well as distrust in public health services, forms focal challenges for any policymaker hoping to improve health services to match people’s needs.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05482-1Internal migrationHealth care accessOccupational healthConstruction workDistrust
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maija Santalahti
Kumar Sumit
Mikko Perkiö
spellingShingle Maija Santalahti
Kumar Sumit
Mikko Perkiö
Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city
BMC Health Services Research
Internal migration
Health care access
Occupational health
Construction work
Distrust
author_facet Maija Santalahti
Kumar Sumit
Mikko Perkiö
author_sort Maija Santalahti
title Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city
title_short Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city
title_full Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city
title_fullStr Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern Indian city
title_sort barriers to accessing health care services: a qualitative study of migrant construction workers in a southwestern indian city
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background This study examined access to health care in an occupational context in an urban city of India. Many people migrate from rural areas to cities, often across Indian states, for employment prospects. The purpose of the study is to explore the barriers to accessing health care among a vulnerable group – internal migrants working in the construction sector in Manipal, Karnataka. Understanding the lay workers’ accounts of access to health services can help to comprehend the diversity of factors that hinder access to health care. Methods Individual semi-structured interviews involving 15 migrant construction workers were conducted. The study applied theory-guided content analysis to investigate access to health services among the construction workers. The adductive analysis combined deductive and inductive approaches with the aim of verifying the existing barrier theory in a vulnerable context and further developing the health care access barrier theory. Results This study’s result is a revised version of the health care access barriers model, including the dimension of trust. Three known health care access barriers – financial, cognitive and structural, as well as the new barrier (distrust in public health care services), were identified among migrant construction workers in a city context in Karnataka, India. Conclusions Further qualitative research on vulnerable groups would produce a more comprehensive account of access to health care. The socioeconomic status behind access to health care, as well as distrust in public health services, forms focal challenges for any policymaker hoping to improve health services to match people’s needs.
topic Internal migration
Health care access
Occupational health
Construction work
Distrust
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05482-1
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AT mikkoperkio barrierstoaccessinghealthcareservicesaqualitativestudyofmigrantconstructionworkersinasouthwesternindiancity
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