Health Barriers Essay

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Health Components & Barriers Access to health services plays an imperative role in preventing disease, promoting and maintaining the wellness of an individual. As an individual it can be difficult to promote health when there is a lack of access to insurance coverage, managed time of care, and health services availability. To maintain and to have unlimited access to health services requires the influence of money. Funding influences every aspect health care. Without funding patients are often face with barriers such as structural barriers, financial barriers, and personal barriers. Specifically, uninsured women are likely to attain a lower standard of care which leads to poor health outcome. Synopsis Access to health care services has been …show more content…

Barriers that were associated with this type of Medicaid was the stigma of poverty. The stigma often associated with poverty within the health system is the receiving of high delivery quality care to new Medicaid enrollees. Low-income families were less likely to have regular healthcare provider or source of care. The effect of low income leads into individuals uninsured. Uninsured communities then promote unhealthy behavior. Though there are financial barrier, the cost of healthcare continued to rise which then became problematic even for those with health insurance because of their lower economic status due to poverty. As a result, barriers then became access to providers, transportation, and attitude of service …show more content…

Within broken barriers the three major steps that Healthcare 2020 Disease Prevention approached in attempting this goal was “gaining entry into the health care system (usually through insurance coverage), accessing a location where needed health care services are provided (geographic availability), and finding a health care provider whom the patient trusts and can communicate with (personal relationship)” (Access to Health Services, 2014). The first component is healthcare coverage. Healthcare coverage helps gain entry into the healthcare system. Patients that lack healthcare insurance are likely to have poor health status, less likely to receive health care, more likely to be diagnosed later, and likely to die prematurely. For example, health needs of women of different orientation are often overlook. Both lesbians and healthcare providers often believe that women who have sex with women do not need cervical cancer screening or routine gynecological care. Therefore, “barriers to health care may include homophobia among providers and a lack of health insurance coverage, because many lesbians are unable to share their partner’s benefits or are eligible for less complete benefit coverage than a spouse

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