Abstract
BackgroundWhile adolescents’ access and utilization of health services is critical for ensuring their health, very few seek care, and if they do, it is primarily from family members, friends, or other non-formal sources of care. Examining the influence of the social context on adolescent health care seeking behaviors may provide us with a better understanding for how interventions can increase adolescents’ utilization of formal health care services.MethodsThe study is based on qualitative and quantitative data collected as part of the Well Being of Adolescents in Vulnerable Environments (WAVE) study, one of the first global studies to focus on very disadvantaged urban adolescents (aged 15–19 years) across five diverse sites, which include: Baltimore (USA), Ibadan (Nigeria), Johannesburg (South Africa), New Delhi (India), and Shanghai (China). Qualitative data was based on numerous methodologies, including key informant interviews, a Photovoice exercise, community mapping, focus groups and in-depth interviews. Quantitative data was gathered from a cross-sectional Audio Computer Assisted Self Interview (ACASI) survey that was administered to approximately 450–500 adolescents per site, yielding a total of 2,393 adolescents. Respondent-driven sampling was used to ensure the sample include out-of-school youth and unstably housed youth who are often underrepresented in school-based or household-based samples.ResultsWhile adolescents in Baltimore, New Delhi, and Johannesburg were more likely to seek health services if they felt illness symptoms, a fairly large proportion of adolescents indicated that even when they needed health care, they didn’t seek it. In Johannesburg, more than 30 % of adolescents did not seek care even when they knew it was needed. Similarly, nearly a quarter of adolescents in Baltimore and in Shanghai indicated not seeking care when needed. Qualitative data indicated that adolescents exhibited a general lack of trust in providers and often felt embarrassed or stigmatized for seeking services. Multivariate analysis revealed that perceived fear and exposure to community violence was associated with a decreased likelihood of seeking care, while adult support from the home increased adolescents’ likelihood to seek care in Baltimore and Johannesburg.ConclusionsAdolescent health care seeking patterns vary substantially by setting and gender. Neighborhood and family environments are important contexts in which health seeking behaviors are shaped. Efforts to connect adolescents to health care will need to target neighborhood safety as well as trust and support among adults outside of provider settings.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12913-016-1597-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
While adolescents’ access and utilization of health services is critical for ensuring their health, very few seek care, and if they do, it is primarily from family members, friends, or other non-formal sources of care
For further details about each of these study sites, please refer to Additional file 1. Using this particular study for our analysis provides an excellent opportunity to examine how adolescent health care seeking behaviors differ across urban sites, and to understand the variations in the way social factors influence adolescent health care seeking behaviors across such sites
The primary aims of this study were to examine how adolescent health care seeking behaviors vary across sites, as well as how the influence of social factors on health care seeking behaviors vary among adolescents across urban sites
Summary
While adolescents’ access and utilization of health services is critical for ensuring their health, very few seek care, and if they do, it is primarily from family members, friends, or other non-formal sources of care. Despite the prevailing notion that adolescents are in one of the healthiest life stages, adolescents of today face more challenges to their health and development than they did a generation ago [1]. Many of these challenges can be attributed to the effects of globalization, technological advances, and economic development. Research has shown that adolescents do not seek health care from formal health facilities, and instead, primarily rely on friends and family members to meet their health needs [10, 11]
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