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Barriers to healthcare and a ‘triple empathy problem’ may lead to adverse outcomes for autistic adults: a qualitative study

Title: Barriers to healthcare and a ‘triple empathy problem’ may lead to adverse outcomes for autistic adults: a qualitative study
Authors: Sebastian Shaw; Laura Carravallah; Mona Johnson; Jane O’Sullivan; Nicholas Chown; Stuart Neilson; Mary Doherty
Publication Year: 2023
Collection: University of Sussex (US): Figshare
Subject Terms: Biomedical and clinical sciences; Specialist studies in education; Psychology; Cognitive and computational psychology; 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences; 52 Psychology; Brain Disorders; Clinical Research; Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD); Autism; Behavioral and Social Science; Mental Health; 7.3 Management and decision making; 8.1 Organisation and delivery of services; 7.1 Individual care needs; 8 Health and social care services research; 7 Management of diseases and conditions; 3 Good Health and Well Being; 1303 Specialist Studies in Education; 1701 Psychology; 1702 Cognitive Sciences; Developmental & Child Psychology
Description: Autistic people experience more co-occurring health conditions and, on average, die younger than non-autistic people. Despite growing awareness of health inequities, autistic people still report barriers to accessing healthcare. We aimed to explore the experiences of autistic people accessing healthcare, shining a light on the complex interplay of relevant factors and to explain, at least in part, the possible reasons underling health disparities and adverse health outcomes. This is a qualitative study from an autistic research team. Data were collected from 1248 autistic adults as part of a large, mixed-methods, international survey exploring barriers to primary healthcare. This article reports the qualitative findings, following a thematic analysis. Using our exploratory findings, we then constructed a model to explain the reported experiences. Respondents reported a variety of barriers. Here, our article gives voice to their stories, in their own words. Themes included: early barriers; communication mismatch; doubt – in oneself and from doctors; helplessness and fear; and healthcare avoidance and serious adverse health outcomes. Our constructed model outlines a chronological journey through which healthcare access barriers may lead to adverse health outcomes. Our findings also build on the double empathy problem, situating this in a medical context, proposing a triple empathy problem. Lay abstract: Autistic people live with more mental and physical health conditions and, on average, die younger than non-autistic people. Despite widespread commitments to tackling these issues, autistic people still report various barriers to accessing healthcare. This article aims to explore the area in depth, from the perspective of autistic people. This research benefits from being led by autistic people, for autistic people – all of the researchers are autistic, and most of us are also medical doctors. Data, in the form of written comments and stories, were collected as part of a large survey. Here, we explored these for ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: 10779/uos.24424333.v1; https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Barriers_to_healthcare_and_a_triple_empathy_problem_may_lead_to_adverse_outcomes_for_autistic_adults_a_qualitative_study/24424333
Availability: https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Barriers_to_healthcare_and_a_triple_empathy_problem_may_lead_to_adverse_outcomes_for_autistic_adults_a_qualitative_study/24424333
Rights: CC BY 4.0
Accession Number: edsbas.7973448E
Database: BASE