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Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey

BACKGROUND: Chronic back pain is a common musculoskeletal disorder, disproportionately affecting rural and Indigenous people. Saskatchewan has a relatively high proportion of rural and Indigenous residents; therefore, understanding barriers and facilitators to accessing healthcare are needed to impr...

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Autores principales: Crockett, Katie, Lovo, Stacey, Irvine, Alison, Trask, Catherine, Oosman, Sarah, McKinney, Veronica, McDonald, Terrence, Sari, Nazmi, Carnegie, Bertha, Custer, Marie, McIntosh, Stacey, Bath, Brenna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10460467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37641592
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11786329231193794
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author Crockett, Katie
Lovo, Stacey
Irvine, Alison
Trask, Catherine
Oosman, Sarah
McKinney, Veronica
McDonald, Terrence
Sari, Nazmi
Carnegie, Bertha
Custer, Marie
McIntosh, Stacey
Bath, Brenna
author_facet Crockett, Katie
Lovo, Stacey
Irvine, Alison
Trask, Catherine
Oosman, Sarah
McKinney, Veronica
McDonald, Terrence
Sari, Nazmi
Carnegie, Bertha
Custer, Marie
McIntosh, Stacey
Bath, Brenna
author_sort Crockett, Katie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Chronic back pain is a common musculoskeletal disorder, disproportionately affecting rural and Indigenous people. Saskatchewan has a relatively high proportion of rural and Indigenous residents; therefore, understanding barriers and facilitators to accessing healthcare are needed to improve healthcare service delivery. METHODS: A provincial-wide telephone survey explored experiences and perceived healthcare access barriers and facilitators among 384 Saskatchewan residents who experienced chronic low back pain. Chi-squared tests were performed to determine if people who lived in urban versus rural areas differed in the proportion who had accessed services from various healthcare practitioners. T-test and Mann-Whitney U analyses were conducted to determine differences between urban and rural, and Indigenous and non-Indigenous respondents. RESULTS: Of 384 residents surveyed, 234 (60.9%) reported living in a rural location; 21 (5.5%) identified as Indigenous. Wait times (47%), cost (40%), travel (39%), and not knowing how to seek help (37%) were the most common barriers for Saskatchewan residents seeking care, with travel being the only barrier that was significantly different between rural and urban respondents (P ⩽ .001). Not knowing where to go to access care or what would help their low back pain (P = .03), lack of cultural sensitivity (P = .007), and comfort discussing problems with health care professionals (P = .26) were greater barriers for Indigenous than non-Indigenous participants. Top facilitators (>50% of respondents) included publicly funded healthcare, locally accessible healthcare services, and having supportive healthcare providers who facilitate referral to appropriate care, with urban respondents considering the latter 2 as greater facilitators than rural respondents. Telehealth or virtual care (P = .013) and having healthcare options nearby in their community (P = .045) were greater facilitators among Indigenous participants compared to non-Indigenous respondents. CONCLUSIONS: Rural, urban, Indigenous, and non-Indigenous people report overlapping and unique barriers and facilitators to accessing care for chronic low back pain. Understanding perceived access experiences will assist in developing more effective care models for specific communities or regions.
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spelling pubmed-104604672023-08-28 Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey Crockett, Katie Lovo, Stacey Irvine, Alison Trask, Catherine Oosman, Sarah McKinney, Veronica McDonald, Terrence Sari, Nazmi Carnegie, Bertha Custer, Marie McIntosh, Stacey Bath, Brenna Health Serv Insights Original Research Article BACKGROUND: Chronic back pain is a common musculoskeletal disorder, disproportionately affecting rural and Indigenous people. Saskatchewan has a relatively high proportion of rural and Indigenous residents; therefore, understanding barriers and facilitators to accessing healthcare are needed to improve healthcare service delivery. METHODS: A provincial-wide telephone survey explored experiences and perceived healthcare access barriers and facilitators among 384 Saskatchewan residents who experienced chronic low back pain. Chi-squared tests were performed to determine if people who lived in urban versus rural areas differed in the proportion who had accessed services from various healthcare practitioners. T-test and Mann-Whitney U analyses were conducted to determine differences between urban and rural, and Indigenous and non-Indigenous respondents. RESULTS: Of 384 residents surveyed, 234 (60.9%) reported living in a rural location; 21 (5.5%) identified as Indigenous. Wait times (47%), cost (40%), travel (39%), and not knowing how to seek help (37%) were the most common barriers for Saskatchewan residents seeking care, with travel being the only barrier that was significantly different between rural and urban respondents (P ⩽ .001). Not knowing where to go to access care or what would help their low back pain (P = .03), lack of cultural sensitivity (P = .007), and comfort discussing problems with health care professionals (P = .26) were greater barriers for Indigenous than non-Indigenous participants. Top facilitators (>50% of respondents) included publicly funded healthcare, locally accessible healthcare services, and having supportive healthcare providers who facilitate referral to appropriate care, with urban respondents considering the latter 2 as greater facilitators than rural respondents. Telehealth or virtual care (P = .013) and having healthcare options nearby in their community (P = .045) were greater facilitators among Indigenous participants compared to non-Indigenous respondents. CONCLUSIONS: Rural, urban, Indigenous, and non-Indigenous people report overlapping and unique barriers and facilitators to accessing care for chronic low back pain. Understanding perceived access experiences will assist in developing more effective care models for specific communities or regions. SAGE Publications 2023-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10460467/ /pubmed/37641592 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11786329231193794 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Research Article
Crockett, Katie
Lovo, Stacey
Irvine, Alison
Trask, Catherine
Oosman, Sarah
McKinney, Veronica
McDonald, Terrence
Sari, Nazmi
Carnegie, Bertha
Custer, Marie
McIntosh, Stacey
Bath, Brenna
Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey
title Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey
title_full Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey
title_fullStr Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey
title_full_unstemmed Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey
title_short Healthcare Access Challenges and Facilitators for Back Pain Across the Rural-Urban Continuum in Saskatchewan, Canada: Cross-Sectional Results From a Provincial-Wide Telephone Survey
title_sort healthcare access challenges and facilitators for back pain across the rural-urban continuum in saskatchewan, canada: cross-sectional results from a provincial-wide telephone survey
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10460467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37641592
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11786329231193794
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