Boundary spanning practices of community connectors for engaging ‘hardly reached’ people in health services
Carolyn Wallace,
Jane Farmer and
Anthony McCosker
Social Science & Medicine, 2019, vol. 232, issue C, 366-373
Abstract:
Global health policies direct health services to improve access and health outcomes of people who are ‘hardly reached’ by services. The institutionalised nature of health services with associated professional and organisational boundaries create ongoing challenges to achieving this policy aim. We present an approach to this challenge by exploring how health services can tap into the existing boundary spanning activities of community members we term as ‘community connectors’ who undertake valuable boundary work within the community to include people who are hardly reached. We address the research questions: what are the behaviours and characteristics of community connectors?; to what extent are they motivated to help out with health?; and how can health service personnel identify community connectors? We conducted an instrumental case study during 2017 in Victoria, Australia in the catchment area of a rural health service. Interviews with 17 key informants and eight staff members led to a further 15 interviews with community connectors. We identified the three key roles of ‘noticer and responder’, ‘connector’ and ‘provider’ that make connectors a valuable asset for health services. Community connectors seek opportunities to negotiate new boundaries with health services that support their boundary spanning with people hardly reached and also enable health services to transgress their own boundaries and access people who are hardly reached. We conclude that by paying attention to their own production, maintenance and transgression of boundaries, health services can apply this approach, noting that the local and iterative nature of identifying community connectors means that each cohort of community connectors will be unique as determined by local boundaries and relationships.
Keywords: Australia; Health inequalities; Health services; Boundary work; Boundary spanning; Community connector; Access; Case study (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:socmed:v:232:y:2019:i:c:p:366-373
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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.05.034
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