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BMC primary care. 2024 Jun 3;25(1):196. doi: 10.1186/s12875-024-02442-0 Q12.62025

Understanding barriers to well-child visit attendance among racial and ethnic minority parents

理解种族和少数民族父母在儿童保健访问中存在的障碍 翻译改进

Nisha Fahey  1, Allison Holt  2, Deniz Cataltepe  3, Annelise Brochier  4, Amy Stern  5, Morgan Mazanec  6, James W Courtemanche  5, Tracey Wilkie  7, Kellie Tan  7, Rulan Lyu  7, Eric Alper  7, Josephine Fowler  2, Lawrence Rhein  2, Arvin Garg  2

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作者单位

  • 1 UMass Chan Medical School, 55 Lake Ave N, Worcester, MA, 01655, USA. nisha.fahey@umassmed.edu.
  • 2 UMass Chan Medical School, 55 Lake Ave N, Worcester, MA, 01655, USA.
  • 3 Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
  • 4 Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
  • 5 Massachusetts Health Quality Partners, Brighton, MA, USA.
  • 6 Dartmouth Health, Lebanon, NH, USA.
  • 7 UMass Memorial Health, Worcester, MA, USA.
  • DOI: 10.1186/s12875-024-02442-0 PMID: 38831259

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Objectives: To assess racial and ethnic minority parents' perceptions about barriers to well-child visit attendance.

    Methods: For this cross-sectional qualitative study, we recruited parents of pediatric primary care patients who were overdue for a well-child visit from the largest safety net healthcare organization in central Massachusetts to participate in semi-structured interviews. The interviews focused on understanding potential knowledge, structural, and experiential barriers for well-child visit attendance. Interview content was inductively coded and directed content analysis was performed to identify themes.

    Results: Twenty-five racial and ethnic minority parents participated; 17 (68%) of whom identified Spanish as a primary language spoken at home. Nearly all participants identified the purpose, significance, and value of well-child visits. Structural barriers were most cited as challenges to attending well-child visits, including parking, transportation, language, appointment availability, and work/other competing priorities. While language emerged as a distinct barrier, it also exacerbated some of the structural barriers identified. Experiential barriers were cited less commonly than structural barriers and included interactions with office staff, racial/ethnic discrimination, appointment reminders, methods of communication, wait time, and interactions with providers.

    Conclusions: Racial and ethnic minority parents recognize the value of well-child visits; however, they commonly encounter structural barriers that limit access to care. Furthermore, a non-English primary language compounds the impact of these structural barriers. Understanding these barriers is important to inform health system policies to enhance access and delivery of pediatric care with a lens toward reducing racial and ethnic-based inequities.

    Keywords: Barriers to care; Health inequity; Language; Well-child visits.

    Keywords:well-child visit attendance

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    期刊名:Bmc primary care

    缩写:BMC PRIM CARE

    ISSN:N/A

    e-ISSN:2731-4553

    IF/分区:2.6/Q1

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