Prisoners' perceived oral and general health and their experience with accessing, understanding and assessing health information: A qualitative study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32736Dato
2024-01-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Prisoners’ oral health and general health are closely connected and generally poorer
than that of the wider population. Moreover, knowledge of prisoners’ health literacy
is scarce. This study aimed to explore prisoners’ perceived oral and general health and
how they accessed, understood and assessed health information to gain insight into
their health literacy. Twelve prisoners in a high-security prison and a halfway house
participated in individual semi-structured interviews. Data was analysed through thematic analysis, which identified five themes: inconsistent self-reporting of general
and oral health; autonomous health behaviour through utilizing personal resources;
preference for personalized adapted health information; psychological and physical proximity; and barriers. The prisoners perceived their oral and general health
as good despite several health problems. They expressed scepticism towards health
information from public authorities and made their own health-related choices based
on previous experiences, their own ‘common sense’ and the experiences of people they trusted. Health information was considered useful when adjusted to their
needs. Obtaining health-related information through physical encounters was considered more accessible than through online platforms. Adapting the communication
to prisoners’ expressed needs and their health literacy can enhance the accessibility
to improve their oral and general health. In-person encounters would be preferable.
Forlag
WileySitering
Bergum, Bull, Stein, Evensen. Prisoners' perceived oral and general health and their experience with accessing, understanding and assessing health information: A qualitative study. European Journal of Oral Sciences. 2024Metadata
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s)