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http://hdl.handle.net/11375/27929
Title: | Primary care-based interventions to address patients' unmet economic needs |
Other Titles: | Primary care-based interventions to address unmet economic needs |
Authors: | Parry, Jane E |
Advisor: | Dunn, James R |
Department: | Health and Aging |
Keywords: | Social determinants of health;Poverty;Primary care;economic needs;scoping review;qualitative research;case study;income inequality;health impact of poverty;high-income countries;intervention;primary care responsiveness to poverty |
Publication Date: | 2022 |
Abstract: | Poverty is acknowledged as the largest single social determinant of health in many high-income countries. Research into income interventions in primary care settings to address the health impact of poverty is a nascent and evolving field, with many gaps in knowledge. This thesis sets out to fill three related knowledge gaps in three separate papers. The first is a scoping review of the literature, which examines existing interventions currently in use in high-income countries. This review provides a unique overview of income interventions across different primary care settings, gleaned from over 200 papers, focusing on interventions targeting economic needs, and investigating interventions in the primary care setting across the whole spectrum, from screening patients, and collecting and managing the data generated in the process, to referring patients to external services, and directly intervening to address patients’ needs. The second is a case study of an income security health promotion service in a family practice in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The study is the first to gather perspectives of key informants involved in this service, and to understand its origins, context and functioning. The study explores the external forces and contextual factors that have shaped the origin and development of the service, and offers important insights into how to create and sustain such a programme in other primary care settings. The third paper looks at an environment with extremely high rates of poverty–Hong Kong–where there are no such interventions in place. Through interviews with family physicians, the study explores the multiple barriers to primary care responsiveness to poverty, as well as potential facilitators and avenues for change. In doing so, the paper offers pointers for the introduction of such interventions not only in Hong Kong, but also in other high-income settings with high levels of inequality. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/27929 |
Appears in Collections: | Open Access Dissertations and Theses |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Parry_Jane_E_202209_PhD.pdf | 1.99 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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