Darbyshire Philip, Muir-Cochrane Eimear, Fereday Jennifer, Jureidini Jon, Drummond Andrew
Department of Nursing and Midwifery Research and Practice Development, Children, Youth and Women's Health Service, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Health Soc Care Community. 2006 Nov;14(6):553-62. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2524.2006.00643.x.
The present qualitative study describes and discusses the perspectives and experiences of young homeless people with mental health problems in relation to their interactions with health and social care services. Working in partnership with Streetlink, a supported accommodation assistance programme in Adelaide, Australia, the authors interviewed 10 homeless young people, aged from 16 to 24 years of age, who had experienced mental health problems. In-depth interviews elicited accounts of the best and worst of the participants' experiences of health and social care services. Access to services was not identified as being a significant problem in comparison with the participants' concerns regarding the quality of the services encountered. The central findings stress the importance of a respectful and supportive climate in relation to the qualities of service provision that the young people identified as valuable for their continuing treatment or consultation.
本定性研究描述并讨论了有心理健康问题的年轻无家可归者在与健康和社会护理服务机构互动方面的观点和经历。作者与澳大利亚阿德莱德的一个支持性住宿援助项目Streetlink合作,采访了10名年龄在16至24岁之间、有心理健康问题的无家可归年轻人。深入访谈引出了参与者对健康和社会护理服务最佳和最差体验的描述。与参与者对所遇到服务质量的担忧相比,获得服务并未被视为一个重大问题。核心研究结果强调了营造尊重和支持性氛围的重要性,这与年轻人认为对其持续治疗或咨询有价值的服务质量相关。