“You Need ID to Get ID”: A Scoping Review of Personal Identification as a Barrier to and Facilitator of the Social Determinants of Health in North America
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Definitions of Key Terms
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Relevance Screening
2.4. Data Charting
2.5. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Gaining and Retaining Identification
[The young women] claimed that the biggest structural barriers to care [that they identified] at many hospitals or clinics not designed for homeless youth were questions over consent for care, being asked to provide addresses and an identification (ID) card, and source of insurance or payment [28] (p. 169).
Even a modest fee can make it difficult for a homeless young person to obtain identification—and in many states, the cost of obtaining an ID card is far from modest [25] (p. 18).
3.2. Access to Health and Social Services
Identification is something that you often need when you go to clinics and a lot of our [clients] do not have ID—whether or not they even have Alberta Health Care cards with them or have even applied for their Alberta Health Care cards. We have a lot of out-of-province clients that come through, a lot of immigrants that come through so then that whole issue is do they even get access to certain types of care just due to not having the proper documents [17] (p. 7).
Perhaps surprisingly, structural barriers cited by the youth stemmed not from a paucity of agencies or resources but conversely from the presence of too many agencies with endless bureaucratic requirements involving interagency referrals, the need for identification cards, time-consuming paperwork, and lack of continuity of care [42] (p. 158).
So you have to go to a regular clinic and they take forever to register you and they want to know why you don’t have insurance and then they make you sit there another 45 minutes until they call someone to figure out what it is. I’ve had so many bills from places like that so many notices. I always told them from the beginning, ‘I’m homeless. I don’t have an ID. You can’t call my parents; they will not say they’re my guardians. They will not take responsibility for me. I don’t have insurance.’ You know—it’s like, ‘Can you please? I’m bleeding here - can you help me’? [28] (p. 169).
Returning offenders who have mental illness are often eligible for several public assistance programs, including General Assistance, food stamps, and Medicaid. In the state where the study site is located, all such programs are administered by the state’s public assistance department, which also oversees the application process and thereby controls access to services. Identification requirements are a central feature of the application process, and these requirements emerged early in the study as a source of problems for clients” [19] (p. 117).
3.3. Facilitating Identification Programs and Services
In order to get a fee waiver, a homeless person provides a letter from a shelter employee or other service provider indicating that he is homeless and requesting a fee waiver [29] (p. 21).
4. Discussion
Study Limitations and Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Details for Relevant Findings in Reviewed Literature
Academic Literature on PID | |||||
No. | Author (Year) | Country | Approach/Method | Objective | Relevant Findings |
1 | Appel et al. (2004) [40] | USA | Qual/interviews with outreach staff (n = 55) and intravenous drug user (IDU) clients (n = 144) | Obstacles to AOD (alcohol & other drug) enrollment inherent in policies, practices, and attitudes of institutions | Lack of ID among top five barriers to enrollment and completion of drug abuse treatment program; client suggestions for program facilitators include “admit people who have no PID or documents” |
2 | Asanin et al. (2008) [34] | Canada | Qual/focus groups (n = 8) with 58 immigrants from diverse race/ethnic backgrounds | Explore immigrants’ perceptions of barriers to access to healthcare | Delay in receiving provincial health card results in either lack of healthcare access for several months or in paying for private health insurance, which is costly for many recent immigrants |
3 | Butters et al. (2003) [24] | Canada | Qual/interviews with female street-involved crack users (n = 30) | Examine healthcare needs and experiences women who were involved in the street life of crack and prostitution | ID a key factor affecting access to health care; to get a health card you need ID and an address (which homeless people do not have); 43% did not have a health card for reasons including never had one, lost, stolen, or destroyed |
4 | Campbell et al. (2015) [17] | Canada | Qual/interviews and focus groups with homeless individuals (n = 11) and healthcare providers (n = 11) | Explore perceived healthcare needs and barriers among individuals experiencing homelessness | Many providers and clients described that an important barrier to accessing healthcare services is lack of government-issued ID, including provincial healthcare card; missing/stolen ID cited as common problem |
5 | Cheng et al. (2016) [35] | USA | Quant/analysis of electronic database (n = 11,989) | Evaluate associations of missing paternal demographic information on birth certificates with perinatal risk factors for childhood obesity | Six percent were missing paternal data; missing paternal data on the birth certificate is associated with perinatal risk factors for childhood obesity |
6 | Christiani et al. (2008) [42] | USA | Qual/focus groups with homeless drug-using youth (n = 54) | Investigate barriers and facilitators in delivery of healthcare services from the perspectives of homeless youth | Structural barriers include agencies with multiple bureaucratic requirements involving interagency referrals, need for ID cards, onerous paperwork, and lack of continuity of care |
7 | Daiski (2005) [41] | Canadian | Qual/interviews and focus groups with client volunteers (n = 58) | Evaluate effectiveness of the Health Bus, a mobile healthcare unit | At one location, only half of the participants possessed a health card. Health cards and other ID often stolen or lost; the Health Bus was the only healthcare people without a health card accessed; another barrier is attitude of health care workers |
8 | Ensign et al. (2002) [28] | USA | Qual/interviews with homeless young women (n = 20) | Explore common sources of advice, health-seeking behaviors, and access to care issues of homeless adolescent women | Participants said that the biggest structural barriers to care at many hospitals or clinics not designed for homeless youth were questions over consent for care, being asked to provide addresses and an ID card, and source of insurance or payment |
9 | Gany et al. (2013) [44] | USA | Quant/assessment survey administered in-person to randomly selected food pantries (n = 47) | Analyze how well food pantries accommodate the service needs of medically ill clients | Twenty-nine food pantries (62%) had an identification requirement, including six (or 21%) requiring a government-issued photo ID; requirements for government-issued ID likely to discourage undocumented immigrants |
10 | Gordon (2012) [27] | Canada | Qual/interviews with 102 people visiting ID clinic established to provide basic ID card provided by municipality free of charge | Explore reasons that people lack ID, impact of no ID, and significance that new ID card has for them | Main reasons for ID loss: theft, carelessness, police interaction, drug/alcohol event; main impact of no ID: banking, healthcare, housing, alcohol/cigarette purchase, police checks, treaty benefits, driving, money mart usury; significance of new ID: member of community, access to services |
11 | Heyman (2009) [31] | USA | Mixed/survey of uninsured immigrants (n = 84); interviews with same (n = 52) | Determine healthcare-seeking paths by unauthorized migrants, barriers encountered, and resilience factor of learning and gaining confidence about available services | Participants reported increased demands for PID in order to get healthcare (e.g., employment history, social security number, and citizenship or legal residence ID. “Ernesto has never had these documents…but this documentation requirement is now a basis for denial of services that he previously received.” He remarked, “They [the hospital] are asking for things I cannot produce” (p. 11) |
12 | Hwang et al. (2000) [48] | Canada | Quant/document review of patient encounter and billing records (n = 45) | Document how frequent physicians are not paid for the care they provide to homeless people in outreach settings | Study finds high proportion of homeless people without valid health insurance cards; 46% of encounters with patients without a health card at all, though reasons not specified |
13 | Hwang et al. (2010) [18] | Canada | Quant/survey of homeless individuals (n = 1169) | Examine extent of unmet needs and barriers to accessing healthcare among homeless people within a universal health insurance system | Three hundred and fifteen participants were not in possession of their health insurance card; often it was lost or stolen |
14 | Khandor et al. (2011) [38] | Canada | Quant/survey of homeless adults (n = 385) | Examine active healthcare-seeking paths of unauthorized migrants, range of barriers that they encounter, and resilience factor of learning and gaining confidence about available services | One hundred and twenty-four (34%) participants were not in possession of a health card; most of the people without a health card reported that their card had been lost (48%) or stolen (18%) |
15 | Kurtz et al. (2005) [33] | USA | Mixed/surveys of street-based female sex workers (n = 586); focus groups with same (n = 25) | Assess health and social service needs and barriers to access among street-based women sex workers | Lack of legal ID, address, and/or citizenship status causes women to be ineligible for most employment. Lack of space for ID storage is also a problem, as sex workers are often robbed |
16 | LeBrón et al. (2018) [20] | USA | Theoretical/not stated | Describe three ways government-issued ID requirements have restricted access to health resources | An estimated 11% of voting-age US citizens lack ID, with certain communities additionally marginalized due to lacking a permanent address (e.g., people who are homeless or experienced catastrophic events like fire, domestic violence, environmental disaster) |
17 | McKeary et al. (2010) [47] | Canada | Qual/interviews with healthcare providers (n = 14) | Explore the systemic barriers to healthcare access experienced by refugee populations | Lack of insurance coverage also created a barrier to care (6.3%) six months after arrival, but this disappeared with access to a provincial health card granted after residency waiting period. Additional ID barriers include burdensome paperwork, unclear eligibility rules, poverty, isolation, lack of access to transportation, language, and illiteracy |
18 | Melnik et al. (2015) [36] | USA | Quant/survey of birth registrars (n = 127) | Better understand the current birth registration practices and barriers in accurate and complete reporting | Incomplete information provided by medical staff, birth data are located in multiple systems, conflicting birth data information from different sources, staff resources are inadequate, need for improvement of hospital electronic data systems |
19 | Pauly (2008) [64] | Canada | Theoretical/not stated | Examine harm reduction values and conceptions of justice as framework for addressing inequities in health and healthcare for street-involved drug users | Lack of ID is barrier for accessing health care services or gaining prescription coverage |
20 | Shelton (2015) [39] | USA | Qual/interviews with young people (n = 27) | Investigate the lived experiences of transgender and gender expansive young people with histories of homelessness | Some participants arrived at shelters lacking ID; without ID documents that match their self-designated gender and presentation, transgender and gender expansive young people face harassment and discrimination when applying for jobs. Lack of accurate ID increases likelihood they will experience misgendering during hiring process and while on the job, if hired. Frequent experiences of cisgenderism lead some to not seek employment |
21 | Smith et al. (2010) [37] | USA | Quant/comparison of health plan records with hospital birth certificate records of 325,810 children born between 1998–2008 | Investigate validity of race and ethnic information in health plan administrative records and if this affects understanding of race/ethnic disparities in healthcare utilization | Birth certificates have more accurate data on parental status at time of birth and race/ethnicity; easier access to birth certificates for birth information will improve health access and health outcomes; inconsistent PID information presents difficulties later in life if people need to replace PID |
22 | Wilson (2009) [19] | USA | Mixed/interviews with staff (n = 10) and clients (n = 14) of prisoner re-entry program; document review; ethnographic observation | Examine range of help-seeking activities; identify dynamics that facilitate access to public services for recently incarcerated people re-entering society | Lack of ID is key barrier for returning offenders; ID often lost during arrest and incarceration or due to mental health challenges. Without ID it is difficult for offenders to apply for ID, a cycle that leads to delays in access to health and social services for people trying to re-enter society and get jobs |
Gray Literature on PID | |||||
No. | Author (Year) | Country | Approach/Methods | Objective | Relevant Findings |
23 | Goldblatt et al. (2011) [45] | Canada | Qual/interviews with staff from social housing support organizations (n = 48) | Identify systematic barriers to housing experienced by service providers | Lack of ID is key barrier to accessing social housing and income support |
24 | Hussey (2015) [25] | USA | Not stated | Identify structural barriers that LGBT youth face in attaining ID and identify policy recommendations for overcoming barriers | Barriers include age restrictions, fees, lack of address, as well as unique barriers for certain communities (e.g., transgender youth, undocumented youth, system involved youth). Recommendations include: establish municipal ID programs that can be tailored to community needs; reduce or waive fees for ID; easing parental approval for ID for a minor, as many LGBTQ youths experience homelessness due to family rejection |
25 | Kopec et al. (2016) [50] | Canada | Qual/interviews with staff at four ID banks | Explore avenues available for creating an ID bank for homeless and vulnerable clients | Main barriers are funding and staffing, though once established, ID storage can be inexpensive |
26 | NLCHP (2004) [29] | USA | Quant/survey of service providers (n = 56) in 16 states that serve total of 25,647 clients per year | Assess nature and extent of the problems faced by homeless persons without photo ID | Around one-tenth (10.7%) of clients lacked photo ID; barriers include lack of address and high cost/fees; implications of not having ID include: denied access to benefits and services and problems with law enforcement |
27 | NNY (2016) [32] | USA | Not stated | Provide overview of issues related to minors obtaining an ID and related recommendations for policy makers | Four main barriers to obtaining ID: needing/obtaining birth certificate, age limits and parental consent, fees, and proof of residency |
28 | Shepherd et al. (2003) [49] | Canada | Not stated | Provide updated information on state of poverty, housing, and homelessness in Toronto | Homeless people at greater risk of having ID, such as their health card, stolen or lost; yet they are most vulnerable and likely to require healthcare |
29 | Shartal et al. (2004) [46] | Canada | Qual/interviews with homeless people with disability (n = 85) | Describe experiences of homeless people with disabilities unable to access Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP) | Homeless people often do not possess ID and financial documents required to apply for the program; thus, ID is structural barrier for most marginalized people |
30 | The Street Health Report (2007) [43] | Canada | Quant/survey of homeless adults (n = 368) | To fill a gap in current knowledge about the health status of homeless people in Toronto | Six percent of respondents said lack of ID is reason for homelessness; ID lost or taken away by authorities; importance of ID for accessing social services |
31 | United Way (2013) [26] | Canada | Not stated | Not stated | Barriers include cost and need of address to get ID |
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Main Terms | Expanded Terms |
---|---|
Identification | (“Photo identification” OR “personal identification” OR “government-issued identification” OR “civil identification” OR “birth identification” OR “birth certificat *” OR “birth registration” OR “photo ID”) AND |
Barriers and facilitators | ((barrier * OR challenge *) OR (facilitator * OR opportunit *)) |
Characteristics | No. | % |
---|---|---|
Document type: | ||
Peer-reviewed journal article | 22 | 71.0 |
Research report | 9 | 29.0 |
Study location: | ||
Canada | 16 | 51.6 |
USA | 15 | 48.4 |
Study scale: | ||
Local | 25 | 80.6 |
State/provincial wide | 4 | 12.9 |
Not specified | 2 | 6.5 |
Approach: | ||
Qualitative | 14 | 45.2 |
Quantitative | 9 | 29.0 |
Other (not specified, theoretical) | 6 | 19.4 |
Mixed qualitative quantitative | 2 | 6.4 |
Target population a: | ||
Homeless people in general | 11 | 12.9 |
Homeless youth specifically | 4 | 9.7 |
Homeless adults specifically | 3 | 9.7 |
General population | 3 | 6.5 |
Sexual minorities | 2 | 6.5 |
Sex workers | 2 | 6.5 |
Injection drug users | 2 | 6.5 |
Immigrants | 2 | 6.5 |
Refugees | 1 | 3.2 |
Previous offenders | 1 | 3.2 |
Children | 1 | 3.2 |
Cancer patients | 1 | 3.2 |
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Sanders, C.; Burnett, K.; Lam, S.; Hassan, M.; Skinner, K. “You Need ID to Get ID”: A Scoping Review of Personal Identification as a Barrier to and Facilitator of the Social Determinants of Health in North America. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4227. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124227
Sanders C, Burnett K, Lam S, Hassan M, Skinner K. “You Need ID to Get ID”: A Scoping Review of Personal Identification as a Barrier to and Facilitator of the Social Determinants of Health in North America. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(12):4227. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124227
Chicago/Turabian StyleSanders, Chris, Kristin Burnett, Steven Lam, Mehdia Hassan, and Kelly Skinner. 2020. "“You Need ID to Get ID”: A Scoping Review of Personal Identification as a Barrier to and Facilitator of the Social Determinants of Health in North America" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 12: 4227. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124227
APA StyleSanders, C., Burnett, K., Lam, S., Hassan, M., & Skinner, K. (2020). “You Need ID to Get ID”: A Scoping Review of Personal Identification as a Barrier to and Facilitator of the Social Determinants of Health in North America. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(12), 4227. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124227