Mental Health Science (Dec 2023)

“We want to be heard”: A qualitative study of mental health care access among patients of an urban federally qualified health center

  • Marvin So,
  • Jacob Makofane,
  • Miguel Hernandez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mhs2.41
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4
pp. 261 – 269

Abstract

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Abstract Although depression is common in primary care, challenges to timely intervention exist, particularly for communities of color and lower socioeconomic status. Our objective was to understand barriers and facilitators to mental healthcare access among a sample of patients receiving care at a federally qualified health center (FQHC) in Minnesota, United States. We qualitatively interviewed 34 patients of an urban FQHC, purposively sampled on race/ethnicity, insurance status, language, and depression symptom status (based on Patient Health Questionnaire‐9 responses). We inductively and deductively analyzed interview data, leveraging theory in both the codebook development and analysis processes. Participants, who were predominantly English‐speaking, female, not privately insured, and people of color, shared numerous barriers and facilitators to accessing mental healthcare. Prominent barriers primarily concerned healthcare providers, including perceived dismissal of mental health concerns and challenges with provider continuity. Additional barriers included the costs of mental health care, communication breakdowns, the patient portal, and community‐specific perceptions of mental health. Prominent facilitators included clinic organizational factors (internal and external) and staff friendliness and warmth. Other factors including consideration of patients' financial situation, integrated management of behavioral and physical health conditions, language concordant staff, the telehealth visit modality, and the clinic's social mission were also raised as facilitating access. Patient voices from a single FQHC illustrate the challenges and possibilities of providing mental healthcare in safety net settings. Clinical, strategy, and policy solutions can be tailored to minimize barriers and optimize facilitators documented herein.

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