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Abstract
Background: In Europe, Latin-America, and Asia, poly-consultation has become a complex problem for the management of different healthcare systems. However, in the current literature, little attention has been paid to exploring perspectives of territorial and critical analysis to manage unexplained symptoms.The purpose of this study is to analyze the socio-structural elements that underlie the users’ phenomenon of poly-consultation or hyperfrequency in the Chilean primary healthcare system (PHCS).
Methods: This paper represents qualitative data collected as part of an exploratory study that used mixed methods across three metropolitan areas of Santiago, Valparaíso, and Concepción, Chile. The study involved a sample of 24 subjects from administrative and management positions in PHC who were recruited from Family Health Care Centers, considering urban municipalities from the low, medium, and high stratum.The study collected data using one set of semi-standardized interviews during a year. Data analysis used an qualitative content analysis.
Results: This article shows that poly-consultant patients provide a critical clinic category to management and mental health model (foreshadowing a social topology base that promotes a determinate unspecific and diffuse experience on users) that cannot be cover by current biomedical models. Data showed the strain of a somatoform clinic category, especially in the clinic and epistemological exercise, and, also, the relevance of particularities of Chile, a country with a mixed health system characteristics and their effects: the naturalization of collective problems managed as individual problems.
Conclusions: Results from the study have the potential to inform healthcare professionals and managers of strategies for developing effective and territorially based. We conclude that hyperfrequency and poly-consultation in Chile reveal relevant stratification in the territory who has particularities than could be studied from a quantitative perspective.
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