Equity and access: understanding emergency health service use by newly arrived refugees
Objectives: To determine issues that affect newly resettled refugees in accessing an emergency department (ED). Design, setting and participants: We conducted a descriptive community survey using a semistructured questionnaire. Newly resettled refugees from the Middle East and Africa were interviewe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medical journal of Australia 2011-07, Vol.195 (2), p.74-76 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objectives: To determine issues that affect newly resettled refugees in accessing an emergency department (ED).
Design, setting and participants: We conducted a descriptive community survey using a semistructured questionnaire. Newly resettled refugees from the Middle East and Africa were interviewed, statistical analysis was performed, and standard content analysis methods were applied to free‐text responses.
Main outcome measures: Emergency health‐seeking behaviour, sociocultural barriers and beliefs about Australia's emergency health services.
Results: Half the African refugees (53/106) (50%), compared with only 15/49 (31%) of the Middle Eastern refugees, preferred an ED service over other forms of care for an urgent medical condition (P = 0.024). Qualitative data revealed that most newly resettled refugees understand how to use the emergency health services. However, while most indicated that they were able to make a call for emergency medical help, a substantial number of our respondents revealed that they were afraid to make such a call for fear of security implications, on the basis of experiences from their home countries.
Conclusion: Reasons for differences in preferences of health care access, and determining how best to educate the community on the use of ED services, warrant further investigation. From a policy perspective, the increasing health care needs of refugees need re‐examination when planning health care provision to refugees. |
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ISSN: | 0025-729X 1326-5377 |
DOI: | 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2011.tb03210.x |