Johnsen Sarah, Cuthill Fiona, Blenkinsopp Janice
Institute for Social Policy, Housing and Equalities Research, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK.
School of Health in Social Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Jan 4;21(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-06013-8.
Severely and multiply disadvantaged members of the homeless population are disproportionately vulnerable to exceptionally high levels of multi-morbidity and premature death. Given widespread calls for the development of interventions that might improve the uptake and effectiveness of healthcare for this population, this study investigated patient and other stakeholder perspectives regarding an outreach service, delivered by prescribing pharmacists in collaboration with a local voluntary sector provider, within homelessness services and on the street in Glasgow (UK).
The qualitative study involved semi-structured face-to-face interviews with 40 purposively sampled individuals with current or recent experience of homelessness (32 of whom had direct experience of the service and 8 of whom did not), all (n = 4) staff involved in frontline delivery of the service, and 10 representatives of stakeholder agencies working in partnership with the service and/or with the same client group. Pseudonymised verbatim interview transcriptions were analysed systematically via thematic and framework analysis.
The service was effective at case finding and engaging with patients who were reluctant to utilise or physically unable to access existing (mainstream or specialist 'homeless') healthcare provision. It helped patients overcome many of the barriers that homeless people commonly face when attempting to access healthcare, enabled immediate diagnosis and prescription of medication, and catalysed and capitalised on windows of opportunity when patients were motivated to address healthcare needs. A number of improvements in health outcomes, including but not limited to medication adherence, were also reported.
A proactive, informal, flexible, holistic and person-centred outreach service delivered within homelessness service settings and on the street can act as a valuable bridge to both primary and secondary healthcare for people experiencing homelessness who would otherwise 'fall through the gaps' of provision. Prescribing pharmacist input coupled with third sector involvement into healthcare for this vulnerable population allows for the prompt treatment of and/or prescription for a range of conditions, and offers substantial potential for improving health-related outcomes.
无家可归人群中极度和多重弱势的成员更容易出现极高程度的多种疾病并存情况和过早死亡。鉴于人们普遍呼吁开发可能改善这一人群医疗服务的可及性和有效性的干预措施,本研究调查了患者及其他利益相关者对一项外展服务的看法,该服务由开处方的药剂师与当地志愿部门提供者合作提供,在格拉斯哥(英国)的无家可归者服务机构和街头开展。
这项定性研究包括对40名有当前或近期无家可归经历的个体进行半结构化面对面访谈(其中32人有该服务的直接体验,8人没有)、所有参与该服务一线提供的工作人员(n = 4)以及与该服务和/或同一客户群体合作的利益相关机构的10名代表。通过主题分析和框架分析对匿名的逐字访谈记录进行系统分析。
该服务在发现病例以及与不愿使用或因身体原因无法获得现有(主流或专门的“无家可归者”)医疗服务的患者接触方面很有效。它帮助患者克服了无家可归者在尝试获得医疗服务时通常面临的许多障碍,实现了药物的即时诊断和处方,并在患者有动力解决医疗需求时促成并利用了机会之窗。还报告了一些健康结果的改善,包括但不限于药物依从性。
在无家可归者服务机构内部和街头提供的积极主动、非正式、灵活、全面且以患者为中心的外展服务,可以成为那些否则会“被医疗服务体系遗漏”的无家可归者通往初级和二级医疗保健的宝贵桥梁。开处方的药剂师的参与以及第三部门对这一弱势群体医疗保健的介入,能够对一系列病症进行及时治疗和/或开出处方,并在改善与健康相关的结果方面具有巨大潜力。