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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Jun 26.
Published in final edited form as: Ageing Soc. 2009 May 1;29(4):585–608. doi: 10.1017/S0144686X08007952

Table 1.

Characteristics of the seven dimensions of candidacy

Dimension Characteristics
Identification Differential recognition of symptoms as needing medical attention.
Vulnerable populations are more likely to manage health as a series of crises.
‘Evidence of lower use of preventive services and higher use of accident and emergency facilities, emergency admissions and out-of-hours use’ (Dixon-Woods et al. 2006: 12).
Navigation Awareness of the services on offer; known to be reduced for vulnerable populations.
Mobilisation of practical resources, e.g. time off work and transportation, which are typically less readily available to vulnerable populations.
Permeability of services Services are more or less accessible (‘permeable’) depending on the qualifications of candidacy required to use them (e.g. a referral) and the degree to which resources need to be organised.
Less permeable services ‘demand a higher degree of cultural alignment between themselves and their users’ (2006: 12).
Appearances at health services Credibility once the client has presented at a health service depends on his/her competence in formulating and articulating the issue for which help is being sought.
Adjudications Judgement calls made by the health professionals who clients initially consult.
‘Professional perceptions of the cultural and health capital required to convert a unit of health provision into a given unit of health gain may function as barriers to healthcare.…In addition, perceptions of social “deservingness” may play a role’ (2006: 13).
Offers and resistance Resistance by patients to referrals and/or offers of medication.
Operating conditions ‘Locally-specific influences on interactions between practitioners and patients’.
‘The perceived or actual availability and suitability of resources to address [a claim to] candidacy’ (2006: 14).