A Systematic Evaluation of Barriers and Facilitators to the Provision of Services for Justice-Involved Women
- PMID: 32737745
- DOI: 10.1007/s10900-020-00894-w
A Systematic Evaluation of Barriers and Facilitators to the Provision of Services for Justice-Involved Women
Abstract
The community health delivery system (CHDS) are vital agencies to the success of integration and the provision of services to improve the health and well-being of justice-involved women. Many agencies face barriers and challenges in providing services to vulnerable populations, such as justice-involved women, and, as a result, often offer individual rather than coordinator care. Thus, it is necessary to explore CHDS systemic barriers and challenges to identify opportunities for coordinated care. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 26 CHDS directors or designees to identify systemic barriers and challenges, organizational processes, experiences with vulnerable populations, services and programs, and care coordination and perceived women's barriers and challenges to the provision of services including decision-making processes and access. Qualitative analyses were used to construct thematic descriptions in five areas: (1) mental health as an unmet need, (2) financial constraints, (3) limited organizational capacity, (4) implicit bias, and (5) minimal cultural support of vulnerable populations.
Keywords: Community health delivery system; Implicit bias; Justice-involved women; Structural competence.
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