Presenting and Anticipatory Needs for Accessibility to Providers and Services: The Experiences of Six Frail Older Widows Living in Medically Underserved Areas
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Published:2005
Eileen J. Porter, 2005. "Presenting and Anticipatory Needs for Accessibility to Providers and Services: The Experiences of Six Frail Older Widows Living in Medically Underserved Areas", Health Care Services, Racial and Ethnic Minorities and Underserved Populations: Patient and Provider Perspectives, Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld
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Older women living in medically underserved areas (MUA) might have particular problems with access to health care. This is an in-depth report of the accessibility issues raised by six frail older women (age 82–93 years) during a longitudinal descriptive phenomenological study of the experience of home care. Three White women lived in the same rural MUA, and three Black women lived in the same urban MUA. The need for health service was understood subjectively and prospectively as the personal perception of a situation requiring relief or supply. Some women reported presenting needs for accessibility to providers, whereas others reported needs for their future accessibility to providers or services. Some intentions were likely linked to residence location, and residence in a rural MUA was relevant to the phenomenon of securing the help that I might need down the road. Feasibility was proposed as a new parameter of access. Research and practice implications were proposed.
