Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.

This study analyzes the perspective of 16 managers from different Brazilian regions about the barriers to adequate care for dependent older adults in Brazilian PHC. This qualitative approach is anchored in the hermeneutic-dialectic theoretical framework. It builds on the principle that aging has dif...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jonas Loiola Gonçalves, Raimunda Magalhães da Silva, Girliani Silva de Sousa, Indara Cavalcante Bezerra, Christina César Praça Brasil, Luiza Jane Eyre de Souza Vieira, Fernanda Colares de Borba Netto, José Maria Ximenes Guimarães, Maria Cecilia de Souza Minayo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309309
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846101934538227712
author Jonas Loiola Gonçalves
Raimunda Magalhães da Silva
Girliani Silva de Sousa
Indara Cavalcante Bezerra
Christina César Praça Brasil
Luiza Jane Eyre de Souza Vieira
Fernanda Colares de Borba Netto
José Maria Ximenes Guimarães
Maria Cecilia de Souza Minayo
author_facet Jonas Loiola Gonçalves
Raimunda Magalhães da Silva
Girliani Silva de Sousa
Indara Cavalcante Bezerra
Christina César Praça Brasil
Luiza Jane Eyre de Souza Vieira
Fernanda Colares de Borba Netto
José Maria Ximenes Guimarães
Maria Cecilia de Souza Minayo
author_sort Jonas Loiola Gonçalves
collection DOAJ
description This study analyzes the perspective of 16 managers from different Brazilian regions about the barriers to adequate care for dependent older adults in Brazilian PHC. This qualitative approach is anchored in the hermeneutic-dialectic theoretical framework. It builds on the principle that aging has different epidemiological rhythms and multiple specific demands from older adults' biopsychosocial changes. We highlighted several challenges to health services, since family, educational, organizational, and social contexts are fragmented. The 16 managers were selected by convenience from June to September 2019. They interacted individually in a semi-structured interview lasting approximately 30 minutes. The interviews were transcribed in full, and data were organized into four empirically selected themes: barriers due to dependent older adults' family care problems; lack of priority in PHC scheduling; failure in recruiting and training professionals; and lack of a specific public policy. The results indicated weakened families regarding lack of training and overload, especially female caregivers in care routine. Managers recognize the repeated comings and goings and searching for PHC access, highlighting insufficient primary services to organize care. Noteworthy is that high population demand exacerbates inadequate coverage, since lack of professionals with adequate training, priority on the agenda of services, and a public support policy to meet this population's needs fragment healthcare. Thus, it is essential to remedy the barriers recognized by managers by training more experts and qualifying professionals in the service. Society must recognize the stages of aging and support families, especially those most socially needy. The health sector at the Primary Care level has much to contribute to ensuring social protection and healthy longevity for Brazilians.
format Article
id doaj-art-81b570e51ff64a4e881a0e7f3941f262
institution Kabale University
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2024-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-81b570e51ff64a4e881a0e7f3941f2622024-12-28T05:31:24ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-011910e030930910.1371/journal.pone.0309309Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.Jonas Loiola GonçalvesRaimunda Magalhães da SilvaGirliani Silva de SousaIndara Cavalcante BezerraChristina César Praça BrasilLuiza Jane Eyre de Souza VieiraFernanda Colares de Borba NettoJosé Maria Ximenes GuimarãesMaria Cecilia de Souza MinayoThis study analyzes the perspective of 16 managers from different Brazilian regions about the barriers to adequate care for dependent older adults in Brazilian PHC. This qualitative approach is anchored in the hermeneutic-dialectic theoretical framework. It builds on the principle that aging has different epidemiological rhythms and multiple specific demands from older adults' biopsychosocial changes. We highlighted several challenges to health services, since family, educational, organizational, and social contexts are fragmented. The 16 managers were selected by convenience from June to September 2019. They interacted individually in a semi-structured interview lasting approximately 30 minutes. The interviews were transcribed in full, and data were organized into four empirically selected themes: barriers due to dependent older adults' family care problems; lack of priority in PHC scheduling; failure in recruiting and training professionals; and lack of a specific public policy. The results indicated weakened families regarding lack of training and overload, especially female caregivers in care routine. Managers recognize the repeated comings and goings and searching for PHC access, highlighting insufficient primary services to organize care. Noteworthy is that high population demand exacerbates inadequate coverage, since lack of professionals with adequate training, priority on the agenda of services, and a public support policy to meet this population's needs fragment healthcare. Thus, it is essential to remedy the barriers recognized by managers by training more experts and qualifying professionals in the service. Society must recognize the stages of aging and support families, especially those most socially needy. The health sector at the Primary Care level has much to contribute to ensuring social protection and healthy longevity for Brazilians.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309309
spellingShingle Jonas Loiola Gonçalves
Raimunda Magalhães da Silva
Girliani Silva de Sousa
Indara Cavalcante Bezerra
Christina César Praça Brasil
Luiza Jane Eyre de Souza Vieira
Fernanda Colares de Borba Netto
José Maria Ximenes Guimarães
Maria Cecilia de Souza Minayo
Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.
PLoS ONE
title Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.
title_full Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.
title_fullStr Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.
title_short Barriers to care for dependent older adults: Brazilian Primary Health Care managers' perspective.
title_sort barriers to care for dependent older adults brazilian primary health care managers perspective
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309309
work_keys_str_mv AT jonasloiolagoncalves barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT raimundamagalhaesdasilva barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT girlianisilvadesousa barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT indaracavalcantebezerra barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT christinacesarpracabrasil barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT luizajaneeyredesouzavieira barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT fernandacolaresdeborbanetto barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT josemariaximenesguimaraes barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective
AT mariaceciliadesouzaminayo barrierstocarefordependentolderadultsbrazilianprimaryhealthcaremanagersperspective