Miedema Baukje, Easley Julie K E, Robinson Lynne M
Dalhousie University Family Medicine Teaching Unit, Dr Everett Chalmers Regional Hospital, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.
Rural Remote Health. 2013 Apr-Jun;13(2):2324. Epub 2013 Mar 26.
Large administrative data set analyses demonstrate that geography has a significant impact on access to health care and subsequent health outcomes. In general, rural populations have poorer access to healthcare services. This article explores the reality of this issue for young adult cancer survivors.
Data was of a subset of 30 participants from a larger qualitative study that examined cancer survivorship issues for young adult cancer patients in Canada. The subset of participants are from New Brunswick, a predominantly rural province in Eastern Canada with a population of 750,000 spread out over a large geographical area, and from Canada's largest metropolis center, Greater Toronto Area, with a population of around 6 million.
Analysis of the qualitative data using constructivist grounded theory revealed several expected and unexpected differences between the two geographically distinct groups. The rural group of young adult cancer survivors reported more frequent episodes of delayed diagnosis and lower levels of community support compared to the urban participants. The urban young adult cancer survivors discussed out-of-pocket expenses for cancer treatment more often than the rural participants. Many rural participants made it clear that they were keenly aware that not all cancer care services were readily available where they lived, and yet they reported considerably higher levels of satisfaction with the cancer care that they received than the urban participants.
Despite the lack of important cancer services in rural areas, rural young adult cancer survivors expressed higher levels of satisfaction with their care than did urban cancer survivors. It appears that levels of satisfaction are related to expectations. Rural participants were aware of the more limited services available and felt that their cancer care practitioners provided the best care possible given the limited resources. Urban participants may have higher expectations of cancer care and felt that the cancer care they received fell below expectations. In the future, researchers may want to focus on cancer care expectations, satisfaction levels and psychosocial outcomes in greater detail.
大型行政数据集分析表明,地理位置对获得医疗保健及后续健康结果有重大影响。一般来说,农村人口获得医疗服务的机会较差。本文探讨了年轻成年癌症幸存者面临这一问题的实际情况。
数据来自一项更大规模定性研究的30名参与者子集,该研究调查了加拿大年轻成年癌症患者的癌症 survivorship 问题。参与者子集来自新不伦瑞克省,这是加拿大东部一个主要为农村的省份,人口75万,分布在大片地理区域,以及加拿大最大的大都市中心大多伦多地区,人口约600万。
使用建构主义扎根理论对定性数据进行分析,揭示了这两个地理上不同的群体之间一些预期和意外的差异。与城市参与者相比,农村年轻成年癌症幸存者报告延迟诊断的情况更频繁,社区支持水平更低。城市年轻成年癌症幸存者比农村参与者更常讨论癌症治疗的自付费用。许多农村参与者明确表示,他们敏锐地意识到并非所有癌症护理服务在他们居住的地方都能随时获得,但他们报告对所接受的癌症护理的满意度比城市参与者高得多。
尽管农村地区缺乏重要的癌症服务,但农村年轻成年癌症幸存者对其护理的满意度高于城市癌症幸存者。满意度水平似乎与期望有关。农村参与者意识到可用服务更有限,并认为他们的癌症护理从业者在有限资源的情况下提供了尽可能好的护理。城市参与者可能对癌症护理有更高的期望,并认为他们接受的癌症护理低于期望。未来,研究人员可能希望更详细地关注癌症护理期望、满意度水平和心理社会结果。