Intersection of Migration and Access to Health Care: Experiences and Perceptions of Female Economic Migrants in Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Findings
3.1. Social Connectedness to Navigate Access to Care
“I had no idea how it works. I think, I just went on Google and tried to find a doctor and make the appointment, I didn’t know you had to have, like, coverage for your medications, so that I didn’t know. So, the doctor was gracious enough at that point to give me, like, sample medications, because we didn’t know that you needed medical benefits.”
“What I like health-wise is access to health care was not really a problem for me because I always was fortunate enough to have had a colleague who agreed to be my family doctor, so I never really had a problem with accessing health care but it is a bit awkward if you’re in a group and then that one person has to know everything about your health and I think I was maybe just fortunate to have had very wonderful colleagues who kept it strictly professional.”
“They just embraced us and accepted us into the church family and there was a lady there who, you know, took us under her wing and was just like a big sister to me.”
“I selected few elderly people that are from my country and I tell them my problem.”
“I didn’t reach out for help, I guess because I just, how do I explain it, you know, how do, firstly we didn’t have a family doctor, so I didn’t know where to go and I guess I just felt kind of stupid explaining to somebody, you know, okay I’m sad, help me type of thing.”
“I think my experience was very positive because once we came into Montreal [pause] my husband was told what to do to get his social security number, and I think right away we were hooked up with—I don’t recall the name of the authority now but, you know, with the health authority in Montreal and, yeah, all of the paperwork came with explanations as to, you know, where to go if you needed to see someone.”
“Well, I guess I went onto the internet and Googled, you know, how does one find a doctor and I signed up on, I can’t even remember the name of it, it was some kind of health connect. And you had to fill in forms and whatnot and then we got contacted after a few months …”
3.2. Place of Origin Influence on Access to Care
“… in South Africa, we were so privileged to be part of the system where we had health coverage, so you had your personal physician that you could access much easier than here. What I find difficult here is that I have a doctor here that I go to once a year for my annual visits, but when you’re sick and you phone his office, they will tell you, you can [only] get an appointment next week… so you have to go to a walk-in clinic to a doctor that don’t know you, they don’t know your history. I find, I don’t like that at all, because I need to have a personal relationship with my physician…So, I will now really postpone to go and see a person at a clinic, so I will usually when I go to a clinic, is when I’m really, really, really sick, that it’s bad, because I know I should’ve gone already much earlier. So, in that sense, I think access to health care is not too bad here, it’s available, but that personal relationship that I had with my physician in South Africa was different.”
“That’s correct, yes. Like, everybody was like, when you phone him, ‘We don’t accept new patients.’ I’m like, what if you have this critical condition? Or, if you had an emergency, what do you do?”
“So, for instance, things like PAP smear and it wasn’t there. But, here, it’s part of your routine. So that’s why a lot of people by the time they realize they have an illness, it’s too late.”
“And, you get the flu shots and, there’s no cost. And, you go for your yearly checkups and, there’s no cost.”
“Otherwise, I think health-wise the positive is, I know everybody’s complaining about the wait times, but you get the services that you need. Like the mental health, I received the mental health services. If I need to go and see a psychologist, I’m able to do that. If there is any mental medical tests that needs to be done, I know those options are here and it’s available to us. So, that’s all positives.”
“… it’s just the waiting times, I think, to get to doctors. Some doctors, that you have to wait months to see them. That’s the only thing that’s frustrating here, is getting a doctor and getting into a doctor, like, a specialist, kind of thing.”
3.3. Experiences of Financial Accessibility
“I should say it’s affected my health positively. Yeah, maybe positively. Because I’m able to have this contact with my physician, she’s did so many tests. Back home I would have to pay a lot for me to go for any studies or diagnostic tests and all worth not, but here, once you present your health card you are covered with whatever. So even something that you might be suspecting that might be happening to you, just go for a test and it works. Like there’s not so much stress about it. But maybe back home, because you don’t have the money, you tend to procrastinate or postponing it until it damages your system, stuff like that. But it’s not so here. Even if I’m suspecting something is happening, it’s just for me to walk in there and then and they attend to me. So, I think it’s positive.”
“Ghanaians don’t take care of their health, because even now it’s even worse because they pay, you know… When you go to the main government hospitals, you don’t pay anything. But now they pay for things and there’s more focus on health here than there is in Ghana.”
“Health for me means being able to go to the hospital when you are sick and getting attention, getting medical help anytime you are sick and not thinking about the money. Comparing it to Nigeria, you know, you do not go to the hospital unless you have money, because you have to pay for the card and you have to pay for hospital bills. So, lots of people can’t go to the hospital because they can’t afford it. But in Canada, because you … they take it from if you work and you have health insurance you do not worry about that.”
“Yeah, I think health care, general health care was good but little things like both my girls had teeth problem that they have to straighten their teeth and all of that kind of stuff and that was really a tough one because it was very expensive to do that. Things like glasses, because we all wear glasses, glasses, teeth, you know those special little things. That was a tough one in the beginning, until we could get on a good medical aid, private medical aid to do that, but it’s still they don’t cover a lot of these little extra things. So that was a hard one. I mean, still, even today, if you want to go to a dentist and you have to do a lot of dental work it’s hard. It’s not easy to do that because you have to pay so much out of your own pocket for it.”
3.4. Historical Cultural Orientation to Accessing Health Care
“Medicine, no. No, that was not even the issues, when you come in here, our traditional medicine all have connotation of some spiritual something. So, a Ghanaian woman or a Ghanaian man will be very happy when their doctor talk to you and said, oh you have this, this, this, this and this and you have to take this medicine and then we have to pray. That word pray gives them the placebo effect, even if they give them water, they know the doctor is going to pray, so they’re going to be okay. Because everything that we do with medicine has connotation with praying.”
“To adapt, it’s a gradual process, it’s a gradual process, you need somebody to talk to you, what the procedure is like and what is accepted and what is not accepted. And then one other thing is because we do the herbs at home, maybe you drink, maybe it’ll be three of these cups and you are okay. So, when you give them the medicine and they two, three days and then they feel okay, then they stop, but they are not healed, then they. So, the whole things keep coming over and over and over and over again. Where in Ghana, when you cook all your herbs and drink it, one or two, yeah okay, you are okay, which is not here … My advice would be is as soon as they come, they have to explain things to them, how it works here and the difference between what works here, what works home, might not work here, you know. Because we know some parents who when they came, they didn’t want to give their children any European medicine or the conventional medicine, so they are trying to do that. And some, a long time ago, some people killed their children, you know, like the child have meningitis, you don’t take the children to hospital and then you said, ‘oh, ginger and lemon’ and then by the time they rush to the hospital, it’s too late.”
“… back home there is lots of self-medications. Here, I brought all the meds I could. Back home there is a codeine problem … they drink it to get high. They closed pharmacists who provided it back home. Now tramadol. Abortion in Nigeria is not allowed. So, people give themselves abortions and take medications for it. They can get it over the counter … it’s so easy to get the strongest of drugs over there but not here. In the first two weeks, we got health cards for everyone. I want a doctor who understand African pathology.”
“I think the quality here is excellent, I was also so privileged to do, like I’ve said, already work in other African countries, so I know what the quality of health care is there. So, I think as Canadians, we have absolutely no reason to complain about any health care quality. I think the standards are good, like I said, I would’ve loved more direct access to my own doctor, but that’s more or less my only complaint.”
“It’s a huge mountain that if you don’t have the necessary info, they keep turning you around back and forth. Back home if there is an emergency, you take your child and go. Here, you call 911. Back home as long as you have money you get services. But here if my son is having problem I have no idea where to go. Do I go to [children’s hospital] or [name of another hospital]? I hope nothing happens with them. Back home there is lots of self-medications…Back home during flu season I don’t get kids immunized. I make sure they drink more water and eat vitamin C more. Here, we got the flu shots, but I want a doctor from Nigeria who understands our own pathology more.”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Richter, S.; Vallianatos, H.; Green, J.; Obuekwe, C. Intersection of Migration and Access to Health Care: Experiences and Perceptions of Female Economic Migrants in Canada. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 3682. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103682
Richter S, Vallianatos H, Green J, Obuekwe C. Intersection of Migration and Access to Health Care: Experiences and Perceptions of Female Economic Migrants in Canada. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(10):3682. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103682
Chicago/Turabian StyleRichter, Solina, Helen Vallianatos, Jacqueline Green, and Chioma Obuekwe. 2020. "Intersection of Migration and Access to Health Care: Experiences and Perceptions of Female Economic Migrants in Canada" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 10: 3682. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103682
APA StyleRichter, S., Vallianatos, H., Green, J., & Obuekwe, C. (2020). Intersection of Migration and Access to Health Care: Experiences and Perceptions of Female Economic Migrants in Canada. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(10), 3682. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103682