作者Lee, Corinne Ann
ProQuest Information and Learning Co
The Catholic University of America. Nursing
書名Exploration of the Decision-Making Process to Access and Utilize Healthcare in Women Veterans
出版項2019
說明1 online resource (242 pages)
文字text
無媒介computer
成冊online resource
附註Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 80-12, Section: B
Publisher info.: Dissertation/Thesis
Advisor: Agazio, Janice
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Catholic University of America, 2019
Includes bibliographical references
Previous research described the barriers that women veterans (WVs) encounter during their decision-making to access and utilize healthcare services (Hamilton et al. 2013; Haskell, 2011& Washington et al. 2011).The decision-making process for accessing and utilizing healthcare in VA and non-VA health systems by women veterans is not described in the literature. Using Strauss et al., 1998 (1998) approach to grounded theory and embedding the Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) to assess for decisional conflict, this study explored how and why women veterans decide to access and utilize healthcare. A purposive sample of women veterans (n = 26) was recruited through women veteran service organizations. Twenty-six semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted. The G.R.I.T. Theory of Decision-Making by Women Veterans, (grit, resilience, insight, and trust) emerged from the data as an explanatory theory with five major themes: being vulnerable, navigating the system, digging deep, managing my life as a veteran, and encountering barriers. The core concept, having inner resolve, reflects the foundation through which women veterans rely on for decision-making. Together the categories and core concept evoked grit. According to the GRIT theory, having inner resolve is central to finding strength while vulnerable, navigating the web of healthcare, continuing to dig deep while managing the role as a woman veteran in a civilian world, and mitigating barriers to accessing and utilizing healthcare. Results from administration of the DCS indicated that decisional conflict does not affect their decision to access and utilize healthcare. The GRIT theory has broad implications. Interprofessional education led by schools of nursing that includes veteran centric curriculum content will assist healthcare providers (HCPs) to understand the unique and specific needs of women veterans. Nurses and HCPs who interact with women veterans may recognize the inner resolve and grit in this population and leverage it to facilitate healthcare decision-making. Future studies to expand on the theoretical components of the G.R.I.T. theory are warranted to continue the explanation of how the inner resolve of women veterans can be enriched
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : ProQuest, 2020
Mode of access: World Wide Web
主題Womens studies
Nursing
Health care management
Decision-making process
Healthcare access
Healthcare utilization
Women veterans
Electronic books.
0453
0569
0769
ISBN/ISSN9781392226339
QRCode
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