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Family Practice Vol. 18, No. 3, 277-282
© Oxford University Press 2001


Health Services Research

An exploration of help-seeking behaviour in older people with unmet needs

Kate Walters, Steve Iliffe and Martin Orrella,

Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, University College London, Holborn Union Building, Archway Campus, Highgate Hill, London N19 3UA and
a Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, University College London, Wolfson Building, Riding House St, London W1N 8AA, UK.

Background. Despite decades of research showing high rates of unmet need in older people, there currently is little understanding of why these needs remain unmet. This study was performed as part of a larger feasibility study of a multidisciplinary needs assessment tool in primary care.

Objective. The aim of the present study was to explore patients' and carers' help-seeking behaviour and perceived barriers to meeting unmet needs.

Method. Four general practices were selected purposively in inner city and suburban London. A random sample of 1 in 20 people aged 75 years and over registered with each practice was selected for a multidisciplinary needs assessment using the ‘Camberwell Assessment of Need for the Elderly’ (CANE) schedule and unmet needs identified by patients and their informal carers. For each unmet need, a further semi-structured interview was used to explore the help-seeking behaviour and perceived barriers to meeting their needs. Responses were recorded verbatim contemporaneously and a thematic analysis performed on perceived barriers following completion of all interviews.

Results. A total of 55/84 (65.5%) of patients and 15/17 (88%) of carers completed the initial needs assessment. For 104 unmet needs identified by 31 patients and 11 carers, a further interview was completed on the barriers to meeting that need. Help had been sought for only 25/104 (24%) of unmet needs and it had been offered in only 19/104 (18%). In those not seeking help, withdrawal, resignation and low expectations were dominant themes. In those that had sought help, there were issues of perceived failure of service delivery and rationing, with themes of resignation and withdrawal again emerging in those declining help offered.

Conclusion. The majority of older people and their carers do not appear to seek help for their unmet needs for a range of complex reasons, often involving issues of withdrawal, resignation and low expectations. This complexity has implications for the commissioning of services for older people.

Keywords. Aged 80 and over, geriatric assessment, needs assessment, self-concept, social perception.


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