Cargando…

Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre

BACKGROUND: People experiencing homelessness also experience poorer health and frequently attend acute care settings when primary health care would be better equipped to meet their needs. Existing scholarship identifies a complex mix of individual and structural‐level factors affecting primary healt...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Plage, Stefanie, Baker, Kirsten, Parsell, Cameron, Stambe, Rose‐Marie, Kuskoff, Ella, Mansuri, Arif
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10632618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37656503
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13858
_version_ 1785146147361259520
author Plage, Stefanie
Baker, Kirsten
Parsell, Cameron
Stambe, Rose‐Marie
Kuskoff, Ella
Mansuri, Arif
author_facet Plage, Stefanie
Baker, Kirsten
Parsell, Cameron
Stambe, Rose‐Marie
Kuskoff, Ella
Mansuri, Arif
author_sort Plage, Stefanie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: People experiencing homelessness also experience poorer health and frequently attend acute care settings when primary health care would be better equipped to meet their needs. Existing scholarship identifies a complex mix of individual and structural‐level factors affecting primary health care engagement driving this pattern of health services utilisation. We build on this existing knowledge, by bringing the spatio‐temporal configurations of primary health care into focus. Specifically, we interrogate how space and time inflect situated practices and relations of care. METHODS: This study took an ethnographic approach and was conducted 2021–2022 at an inclusive health and wellness centre ("the Centre") in Southeast Queensland, Australia. The data consists of 46 interviews with 48 people with lived experience of homelessness, including participants who use the services offered at the Centre (n = 26) and participants who do not (n = 19). We also interviewed 20 clinical and non‐clinical service providers affiliated with the Centre and observed how service delivery took place. Interviews and observations were complemented by visual data, including participant‐produced photography. All data were analysed employing a narrative framework. RESULTS: We present three interrelated themes demonstrating how space and time affect care, that is ‘staying safe’, ‘feeling welcome’ and ‘being seen’. ‘Staying safe’ captures the perceptions and practices around safety, which sit in tension with making service users feel welcome. ‘Feeling welcome’ attends to the sense of being invited to use services free of judgment. ‘Being seen’ depicts capacities to see a health care provider as well as being understood in one's lived experience. CONCLUSION: Spatio‐temporal configurations, such as attendance policies, consultation modalities and time allocated to care encounters afford differential opportunities to nurture reciprocal relations. We conclude that flexible service configurations can leverage a relational model of care. PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: Service providers were consulted during the design stage of the project and had opportunities to inform data collection instruments. Two service providers contributed to the manuscript as co‐authors. People with lived experience of homelessness who use the services at the inclusive health centre contributed as research participants and provided input into the dissemination of findings. The photography they produced has been featured in an in‐person exhibition, to which some have contributed as consultants or curators. It is hoped that their insights into experiences of welcomeness, safety and being seen will inform flexible and relational primary health care design, delivery, and evaluation to better cater for people experiencing housing instability and poverty.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10632618
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106326182023-11-15 Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre Plage, Stefanie Baker, Kirsten Parsell, Cameron Stambe, Rose‐Marie Kuskoff, Ella Mansuri, Arif Health Expect Original Articles BACKGROUND: People experiencing homelessness also experience poorer health and frequently attend acute care settings when primary health care would be better equipped to meet their needs. Existing scholarship identifies a complex mix of individual and structural‐level factors affecting primary health care engagement driving this pattern of health services utilisation. We build on this existing knowledge, by bringing the spatio‐temporal configurations of primary health care into focus. Specifically, we interrogate how space and time inflect situated practices and relations of care. METHODS: This study took an ethnographic approach and was conducted 2021–2022 at an inclusive health and wellness centre ("the Centre") in Southeast Queensland, Australia. The data consists of 46 interviews with 48 people with lived experience of homelessness, including participants who use the services offered at the Centre (n = 26) and participants who do not (n = 19). We also interviewed 20 clinical and non‐clinical service providers affiliated with the Centre and observed how service delivery took place. Interviews and observations were complemented by visual data, including participant‐produced photography. All data were analysed employing a narrative framework. RESULTS: We present three interrelated themes demonstrating how space and time affect care, that is ‘staying safe’, ‘feeling welcome’ and ‘being seen’. ‘Staying safe’ captures the perceptions and practices around safety, which sit in tension with making service users feel welcome. ‘Feeling welcome’ attends to the sense of being invited to use services free of judgment. ‘Being seen’ depicts capacities to see a health care provider as well as being understood in one's lived experience. CONCLUSION: Spatio‐temporal configurations, such as attendance policies, consultation modalities and time allocated to care encounters afford differential opportunities to nurture reciprocal relations. We conclude that flexible service configurations can leverage a relational model of care. PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: Service providers were consulted during the design stage of the project and had opportunities to inform data collection instruments. Two service providers contributed to the manuscript as co‐authors. People with lived experience of homelessness who use the services at the inclusive health centre contributed as research participants and provided input into the dissemination of findings. The photography they produced has been featured in an in‐person exhibition, to which some have contributed as consultants or curators. It is hoped that their insights into experiences of welcomeness, safety and being seen will inform flexible and relational primary health care design, delivery, and evaluation to better cater for people experiencing housing instability and poverty. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10632618/ /pubmed/37656503 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13858 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Health Expectations published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Plage, Stefanie
Baker, Kirsten
Parsell, Cameron
Stambe, Rose‐Marie
Kuskoff, Ella
Mansuri, Arif
Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
title Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
title_full Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
title_fullStr Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
title_full_unstemmed Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
title_short Staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: How spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
title_sort staying safe, feeling welcome, being seen: how spatio‐temporal configurations affect relations of care at an inclusive health and wellness centre
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10632618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37656503
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13858
work_keys_str_mv AT plagestefanie stayingsafefeelingwelcomebeingseenhowspatiotemporalconfigurationsaffectrelationsofcareataninclusivehealthandwellnesscentre
AT bakerkirsten stayingsafefeelingwelcomebeingseenhowspatiotemporalconfigurationsaffectrelationsofcareataninclusivehealthandwellnesscentre
AT parsellcameron stayingsafefeelingwelcomebeingseenhowspatiotemporalconfigurationsaffectrelationsofcareataninclusivehealthandwellnesscentre
AT stamberosemarie stayingsafefeelingwelcomebeingseenhowspatiotemporalconfigurationsaffectrelationsofcareataninclusivehealthandwellnesscentre
AT kuskoffella stayingsafefeelingwelcomebeingseenhowspatiotemporalconfigurationsaffectrelationsofcareataninclusivehealthandwellnesscentre
AT mansuriarif stayingsafefeelingwelcomebeingseenhowspatiotemporalconfigurationsaffectrelationsofcareataninclusivehealthandwellnesscentre