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e-Article

Inequity in clinical research access for service users presenting comorbidity within alcohol treatment settings: findings from a focused ethnographic study.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal for Equity in Health. 5/22/2024, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-14. 14p.
Subject
*HEALTH services accessibility
*REHABILITATION of people with alcoholism
*RESEARCH funding
*CLINICAL medicine research
*ETHNOLOGY research
*FIELD notes (Science)
*INTERVIEWING
*ALCOHOLIC liver diseases
*REHABILITATION centers
*THEMATIC analysis
*CONCEPTUAL structures
*INFORMED consent (Medical law)
*TREATMENT programs
*HEALTH equity
*ALCOHOLISM
*DATA analysis software
*COMORBIDITY
*COST of living
Language
ISSN
1475-9276
Abstract
Background: While healthcare policy has fostered implementation strategies to improve inclusion and access of under-served groups to clinical care, systemic and structural elements still disproportionately prevent service users from accessing research opportunities embedded within clinical settings. This contributes to the widening of health inequalities, as the absence of representativeness prevents the applicability and effectiveness of evidence-based interventions in under-served clinical populations. The present study aims to identify the individual (micro), organisational (meso) and structural (macro) barriers to clinical research access in patients with comorbid alcohol use disorder and alcohol-related liver disease. Methods: A focused ethnography approach was employed to explore the challenges experienced by patients in the access to and implementation of research processes within clinical settings. Data were collected through an iterative-inductive approach, using field notes and patient interview transcripts. The framework method was utilised for data analysis, and themes were identified at the micro, meso and macro levels. Results: At the micro-level, alcohol-related barriers included encephalopathy and acute withdrawal symptoms. Alcohol-unrelated barriers also shaped the engagement of service users in research. At the meso-level, staff and resource pressures, as well as familiarity with clinical and research facilities were noted as influencing intervention delivery and study retention. At the wider, macro-level, circumstances including the 'cost of living crisis' and national industrial action within healthcare settings had an impact on research processes. The findings emphasise a 'domino effect' across all levels, demonstrating an interplay between individual, organisational and structural elements influencing access to clinical research. Conclusions: A combination of individual, organisational and structural barriers, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the socioeconomic landscape in which the study was conducted further contributed to the unequal access of under-served groups to clinical research participation. For patients with comorbid alcohol use disorder and alcohol-related liver disease, limited access to research further contributes towards a gap in effective evidence-based treatment, exacerbating health inequalities in this clinical population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]