The socio-ecological determinants of help-seeking practices and healthcare access among young men: a systematic review

Author:

Palmer Robert1ORCID,Smith Ben J1,Kite James1,Phongsavan Philayrath1

Affiliation:

1. Prevention Research Collaboration, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney , Johns Hopkins Dr, Camperdown, Sydney, NSW 2050 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Delayed engagement with health services is a key contributor to poorer health outcomes experienced by men. Patterns of health service usage which reduce the opportunity for disease prevention and health promotion appear to be especially prominent amongst young men. To identify the multiple and intersecting determinants of young men’s help-seeking practices and health services usage, this review uses the social ecological model (SEM) to guide a critical synthesis of the literature on barriers and facilitators experienced by young men in accessing health services. A systematic review was conducted across five databases (MEDLINE, Embase, PsychINFO, CINAHL and Scopus). Included studies presented primary data regarding young men’s (12–24 years) barriers and/or facilitators to seeking and accessing health care. Thirty-one studies (24 qualitative and 7 quantitative) underwent data extraction, quality appraisal and thematic analysis under the guiding framework of the SEM. Seven key themes were constructed, encapsulating the perceived barriers and facilitators to help-seeking and accessing health care experienced by young men, including masculine attitudes, health literacy, social pressure, service accessibility, economic factors, service characteristics and cultural attitudes. These findings highlight the complex interplay between the individual, interpersonal, organizational and societal factors impacting young men’s healthcare engagement. They also illuminate avenues for multifaceted, context-specific interventions to enhance healthcare accessibility for this group, including addressing health literacy gaps, providing culturally sensitive care and reducing cost barriers.

Funder

Men of Malvern and Healthy Male

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference84 articles.

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