Barriers and Enablers of Health Service Utilisation for Childhood Skin Infections in Remote Aboriginal Communities of Western Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Data Collection and Study Population
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Predisposing Factors: Structural Demographic, Social, Economic and Cultural Aspects
3.1.1. At the Client Level
“People get shame with the sores. You know they don’t like to show anyone they have them.”(carer)
“I think that on a scale of priority, health comes at the bottom simply because it’s not anywhere different in any part of the world. If drug and alcohol issues, nutrition, family issues, domestic violence-all of those things—money issues, and grief, their position in the world, their place in our society, really that’s—most people out here would be confronted with personal life traumas as stress factors that most of us really only maybe experience every ten years or five years. […] There’s a powerlessness there where I think that people are just—there’s a kind of a, not giving up, but resigned.”(healthcare practitioner)
“Ninety percent of the nurses over there they don’t understand Martu. They have got no idea what they’re saying. I took a girl over to see a doctor and the doctor had been here 15 years and I had to translate for them. There is a big major language barrier. The staff won’t break it down to simple language […] But the Martu people will say they understand. They will nod their head to the doctor and say they understand even though they don’t.”(other service provider)
3.1.2. At the Provider Level
“[in reference to mainstream health services in town E] The main problem is the shame and judgment going to the clinic. […] The staff at the clinic think that Aboriginal people carry disease. They think ‘oh not that black disease-carrying person again’. That’s why the Aboriginal people don’t want to go to the clinic.”(carer)
“Challenging… not because of being busy, but because of remoteness, loneliness and isolation. The isolation there really is heavy because… basically you know the next doctor for your support is 900 km away. The next community is [name of other community]. It’s also in the middle of nowhere. So basically you are very far, you really feel it, you’re very far, there’s nothing, very few people to talk to. And during the festive season, like now, everyone goes over heat. It reaches up to 55 degrees there. They leave the community. So sometimes you are only two [people] in the community.”(healthcare practitioner)
“The health staff are learning as they go. It is not any disrespect to the doctors or nurses […] It’s a difficult injection to give [in reference to BPG] but it depends on the nurse giving it. It just depends on your technique and training. Some of them are pretty rough up there […] The nurses don’t do the 12 months additional training where you learn the culture, learn the ways. And that is important. This is going to become un-stuck soon because they don’t know who is allowed in the clinic.”(other service provider)
3.1.3. At the System Level
“In some communities where there’s a lot of strong elder people that still practise Maban [powerful spiritual men], or bush medicine, I can almost guarantee you that they would’ve seen a Maban before they’ve seen me, or it’s part and parcel. They coexist, and we don’t acknowledge that enough. I know that in some other parts of Australia, it’s starting to involve it more. But in these parts here, I find that almost unbelievable that as an Aboriginal health organisation we are not encouraging Aboriginal healing side by side in our practice. Because it’s happening anyway. I know they’re highly protective of it, so it’s not just because we don’t acknowledge it. […] I think that there is another avenue for us to maintain their culture by encouraging that, so young people feel they want to go down that way. I mean, it happens irrespective of us, not that we’re training people up for that. Maybe it’s happening in a healthy way? I certainly worked with people on that level, and have let the people use the clinic for use of Maban, and I’ve seen it practised in front of me. And that again comes down to whether they trust you. Whether I believe in it or not is irrelevant. If you really want to be effective in your practices then you also have to acknowledge that that part also plays a part whether it’s placebo or does have an effect.”(healthcare practitioner)
3.2. Enabling Factors: Contextual Aspects of Social Relationships, Community Characteristics and the Health System
3.2.1. At the Client Level
“[in reference to mainstream health services in town E] Even here they do this closing the gap scheme, but all of the black fellas they don’t know that they can go there and see the doctor for free. They need to tell us this stuff you know?”(carer)
“Another component to it, why things may not be as good, I think if there’s a good relationship between nursing staff or medical staff in the community, parents are more likely to bring their children, or the children come themselves at an early stage. And then also depends on how school and the health centres work together. If there’s a good working relationship and the community feels good about the health staff, they tend to come early. If they don’t then it’s left until the last moment.”(healthcare practitioner)
“A lot of these people who are looking after these kids have early stage dementia or other major health problems themselves.”(service provider)
3.2.2. At the Provider Level
“Sometimes the parents get hurtful for that kid having the needle. They don’t want to see that kid screaming there from that needle. And that needle is big it’s not a little needle.”(carer)
“I have to say in my previous experience, rarely [referring to a strong relationship between clinic staff and clients]. There’s been a few times where I’ve seen it, but rarely just because the turn-over of staff is so high really in those posts. There’s generally just one nurse out on their own and they have more than enough—to be on call for 12 hours a day. The turn-over, I guess, has meant that it’s been difficult for people to maintain those kinds of relationships with the community for an extended period of time.”(healthcare practitioner)
“The health clinic doesn’t give them an option for treatment for their skin but it’s whatever the nurse on at the time wants. They don’t care. And that’s the problem.”(other service provider)
3.2.3. At the System Level
“[in reference to mainstream health services in town E] We should have Aboriginal health workers because they will make sure everything is right because they have had so much primary health care.”(carer)
“Local knowledge. They know who the people are. They know who to chase. They will also be able to tell me if people are here or not, if there’s someone I need to catch for one reason or another. And it’s a nice link, and they will tell you what’s culturally appropriate and not appropriate. So having a good health worker is important for the nurses, and I think if you have a clinic with high turnover of nursing staff, having a health worker as your local resource is fantastic.”(healthcare practitioner)
“The problem is, I think, the clinic doesn’t talk that much with [name of community coordinator], the clinic doesn’t talk that much with us. So they’re very much isolated. […] But you can probably gather that communication is the key, and that’s what’s lacking.”(other service provider)
3.3. Need Factors: Aspects of Perceived and Evaluated Need for Health Service Utilisation
3.3.1. At the Client Level
“... she [her daughter] had a sore on her arm so I took her on a plane to Hedland [...] It looked like a blister it was black. I didn’t know it was any problem. The baby doctor said I had to go.”(carer)
“I don’t know what they see as a normal part of life in their skin problems. I know that most likely they’re used to it. They’re used to, "Mom had heaps of boils when she was young, so why should I start running to the clinic with my child when they have them, because they’re just there anyway?"”(healthcare practitioner)
“It’s not neglect, it’s not laziness, it’s just too vague. No one knows what it [the skin conditions] is.”(other service provider)
3.3.2. At the Provider Level
“The health care in these communities is really poor because they don’t teach us.”(carer)
“So it’s different ways of looking at it, but I think education towards the kids about their health needs to be developed and maintained in a different way. And I think the healthcare professions needs to step in and do it, and not rely on the teachers to do it, because the teachers have enough other things they need to educate the things in. I think by getting a new face in, explaining, showing, and then it might be one or two things the kids remember later on that might prevent one kid to have boils or scabies or something like that.”(healthcare practitioner)
“If there’s something that I don’t like the look of, I just get the mom to take them to the clinic, or I do. The clinic’s literally next door to us, so it’s not an issue. It’s not hard taking them. It’s not a long trip or anything.”(other service provider)
3.3.3. At the System Level
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Aprox. Population | % Abl | AMS Clinic | GP Clinic | School | Shop | Police Station | Swimming Pool | Public Hospital | Road Access | Access by Air | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Community A | 250-500 | 76% | yes | no | yes | community store | yes | yes | no | unsealed | airstrip |
Community B | 100-200 | 91% | yes | no | yes | community store | no | no | no | unsealed | airstrip |
Community C | 100-200 | 88% | yes | no | yes | community store | no | no | no | unsealed | airstrip |
Community D | <100 | 88% | yes | no | yes | community store | no | no | no | unsealed | airstrip |
Town E | 5000+ | 10% | no | yes | yes | supermarket | yes | yes | yes | sealed | airport |
Description of Participant Group | # of Interviews | # of FGDs | # of Participants | Sampling Method | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Abl | |||||
Group 1 - parents/carers | mothers, ’aunties’^, ’uncles’^ of young Aboriginal children | 8 | 3 | 16 | 16 | convenience & snowball |
Group 2 - healthcare practitioners* | remote area nurses, nurse practitioners, child and community health nurses, midwives | 8 | 2 | 15 | 2 | purposive |
Group 3 - other service providers | teachers, Aboriginal education workers, early child care workers, community organisation staff | 18 | 4 | 25 | 2 | purposive |
Carer & Child (Client) | Clinic & Staff (Provider) | System | |
---|---|---|---|
Predisposing | Shyness & shame* Traditional remedies & self-treatment * Negative past experiences with clinic* Language barrier Fear of judgement (incl. DCP&FS) | prejudice | |
Enabling | Low costs associated with medical care* Good perception of clinic staff* Access to ’Closing the Gap’ benefits | Engaging & culturally secure staff & practices* Established relationship between staff & client* Clinic waiting time not too long* Comfortable, inviting clinic facility* Acceptability of treatment* Clinic does outreach activities Clear communication re visiting health services Patient engagement | Trained Aboriginal health workers* Ensuring adequate medical supplies |
Need | Lacking awareness re skin infections* Delayed presentations & self-treatment* Normalisation of skin infections* | Clinic not providing sufficient health education* |
Carer & Child (Client) | Clinic & Staff (Provider) | System | |
---|---|---|---|
Predisposing | Shyness & shame* Traditional remedies & self-treatment* Negative past experiences with clinic* Apathy & disempowerment Priorities, values & norms - health & child rearing Cultural taboos Tolerance for discomfort & pain Lacking (health) education | Stressors associated with work environment Jadedness/frustration Training/knowledge gaps | Reconciling traditional and modern medicine |
Enabling | Low costs associated with medical care* Good perception of clinic staff* Access to ’Closing the Gap’ benefits | Engaging & culturally secure staff & practices* Established relationship between staff & client* Clinic waiting time not too long* Comfortable, inviting clinic facility* Acceptability of treatment* | Trained Aboriginal health workers* Ensuring adequate medical supplies Free or low-cost medical care Adequate staff levels & low turnover AMS governance & stability Efficient use of resources Good collaboration with other services Community engagement & outreach policies |
Need | Lacking awareness re skin infections* Delayed presentations & self-treatment* Normalisation of skin infections* | Clinic not providing sufficient health education* |
Carer & Child (Client) | Clinic & Staff (Provider) | System | |
---|---|---|---|
Predisposing | Shyness & shame* Traditional remedies & self-treatment* Negative past experiences with clinic* Language barrier Fear of judgement (incl. DCP&FS) Apathy & disempowerment Priorities, values & norms - health & child rearing Cultural taboos Tolerance for discomfort & pain Lacking (health) education | Stressors associated with work environment Training/knowledge gaps | Reconciling traditional and modern medicine |
Enabling | Low costs associated with medical care* Good perception of clinic staff* Carer is healthy | Engaging & culturally secure staff & practices* Established relationship between staff & client* Clinic waiting time not too long* Comfortable, inviting clinic facility* Acceptability of treatment* Clinic does outreach activities Clear communication re visiting health services Patient engagement | Trained Aboriginal health workers* Free or low-cost medical care Adequate staff levels & low turnover AMS governance & stability Efficient use of resources Good collaboration with other services Community engagement & outreach policies |
Need | Lacking awareness re skin infections* Delayed presentations & self-treatment* Normalisation of skin infections* | Clinic not providing sufficient health education* Actively encourage child/carer to go to clinic |
General | |
The importance of establishing a relationship between healthcare practitioners and parents/carers. | |
client: | good perception of clinic staff. |
provider: | established relationship between staff and clients; stressors associated with work environment; jadedness/frustration. |
system: | adequate staff levels and low turnover; AMS governance and stability. |
The need for the active engagement of parents/carers in their health care through culturally appropriate practice. | |
client: | shyness and shame; language barrier; fear of judgement; cultural taboos. |
provider: | prejudice; engaging and culturally secure staff and practices; patient engagement; training/knowledge gaps. |
system: | trained Aboriginal health workers; reconciling traditional and modern medicine; AMS governance and stability. |
The need for cross-organisational communication and collaboration around child health | |
provider: | clear communication re visiting health services. |
system: | efficient use of resources; good collaboration with other services; community engagement and outreach policies. |
For Skin Infections | |
The need to address normalisation and provide parent/carer education on the importance of skin health and skin infections. | |
client: | need for (health) education; increasing awareness and denormalisation of skin infections; timely presentation to a clinic; acknowledging discomfort and pain. |
provider: | clinic provides sufficient health education; actively encourage child/carer to go to clinic. |
Negative experiences associated with BPG injections | |
client: | ensure positive experiences at the clinic. |
provider: | acceptability of treatment; ensure clinic staff are trained to administer BPG injections as painlessly as possible. |
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Hendrickx, D.; Amgarth-Duff, I.; C Bowen, A.; R Carapetis, J.; Chibawe, R.; Samson, M.; Walker, R. Barriers and Enablers of Health Service Utilisation for Childhood Skin Infections in Remote Aboriginal Communities of Western Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 808. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030808
Hendrickx D, Amgarth-Duff I, C Bowen A, R Carapetis J, Chibawe R, Samson M, Walker R. Barriers and Enablers of Health Service Utilisation for Childhood Skin Infections in Remote Aboriginal Communities of Western Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(3):808. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030808
Chicago/Turabian StyleHendrickx, David, Ingrid Amgarth-Duff, Asha C Bowen, Jonathan R Carapetis, Robby Chibawe, Margaret Samson, and Roz Walker. 2020. "Barriers and Enablers of Health Service Utilisation for Childhood Skin Infections in Remote Aboriginal Communities of Western Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 3: 808. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030808
APA StyleHendrickx, D., Amgarth-Duff, I., C Bowen, A., R Carapetis, J., Chibawe, R., Samson, M., & Walker, R. (2020). Barriers and Enablers of Health Service Utilisation for Childhood Skin Infections in Remote Aboriginal Communities of Western Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(3), 808. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030808