Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships

<p> Access to primary care is limited in rural communities across the United States. Evidence supports primary care as the cornerstone of healthcare. The purpose of this project was to explore community perceptions of barriers to primary care access with the aim of learning about ideas for pos...

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Main Author: Eneh, Ann Ogorchukwu
Language:EN
Published: Walden University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10787679
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-107876792018-05-03T16:04:46Z Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships Eneh, Ann Ogorchukwu Public health <p> Access to primary care is limited in rural communities across the United States. Evidence supports primary care as the cornerstone of healthcare. The purpose of this project was to explore community perceptions of barriers to primary care access with the aim of learning about ideas for possible interventions that could improve primary care access for Mifflin County residents. Penchansky and Thomas&rsquo;s model of healthcare access provided the theoretical framework for this qualitative phenomenological study. Using a community-based research approach, semistructured, open-ended telephone interviews and qualitative surveys were conducted with 26 participants, including physicians, nurses, and residents. Data were analyzed using Edward and Welch&rsquo;s extension of Colaizzi&rsquo;s 7-step method for qualitative data analysis. Key findings included perceptions that (a) primary care access is limited in Mifflin County due to inadequate health services emanating from insufficient community health centers, provider shortages, health insurance issues; (b) high cost and poor choice of services discourage residents from seeking preventative care; (c) distance from services reduce residents&rsquo; ability to access primary care; (d) service problems impact the quality of care received, such as a lack of provider training in opiate addiction; and (e) providers and residents should be involved in primary care service planning since they can provide valuable information to help improve access to services. Positive social change could occur through improvement in access to primary care using a collaborative approach and community involvement, in policy formation and service planning. </p><p> Walden University 2018-05-02 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10787679 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Public health
spellingShingle Public health
Eneh, Ann Ogorchukwu
Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships
description <p> Access to primary care is limited in rural communities across the United States. Evidence supports primary care as the cornerstone of healthcare. The purpose of this project was to explore community perceptions of barriers to primary care access with the aim of learning about ideas for possible interventions that could improve primary care access for Mifflin County residents. Penchansky and Thomas&rsquo;s model of healthcare access provided the theoretical framework for this qualitative phenomenological study. Using a community-based research approach, semistructured, open-ended telephone interviews and qualitative surveys were conducted with 26 participants, including physicians, nurses, and residents. Data were analyzed using Edward and Welch&rsquo;s extension of Colaizzi&rsquo;s 7-step method for qualitative data analysis. Key findings included perceptions that (a) primary care access is limited in Mifflin County due to inadequate health services emanating from insufficient community health centers, provider shortages, health insurance issues; (b) high cost and poor choice of services discourage residents from seeking preventative care; (c) distance from services reduce residents&rsquo; ability to access primary care; (d) service problems impact the quality of care received, such as a lack of provider training in opiate addiction; and (e) providers and residents should be involved in primary care service planning since they can provide valuable information to help improve access to services. Positive social change could occur through improvement in access to primary care using a collaborative approach and community involvement, in policy formation and service planning. </p><p>
author Eneh, Ann Ogorchukwu
author_facet Eneh, Ann Ogorchukwu
author_sort Eneh, Ann Ogorchukwu
title Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships
title_short Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships
title_full Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships
title_fullStr Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships
title_full_unstemmed Access to Primary Care in Pennsylvanian Rural Townships
title_sort access to primary care in pennsylvanian rural townships
publisher Walden University
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10787679
work_keys_str_mv AT enehannogorchukwu accesstoprimarycareinpennsylvanianruraltownships
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