Health and Healthcare Utilization among Asylum-Seekers from Berlin’s LGBTIQ Shelter: Preliminary Results of a Survey
Abstract
:1. Introduction: The Health of LGBTIQ Asylum-Seekers—Little Do We Know
1.1. Asylum-Seekers’ Health and Healthcare in Germany
1.2. LGBTIQ Asylum-Seekers’ Health in Germany
1.3. Insights From the General LGBTIQ Health Literature
1.4. Intersectionality as a Framework for Analyzing LGBTIQ Asylum-Seekers’ Health
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Sampling
2.2. Instrument and Measures
- (i)
- Sociodemographic information comprises age, gender, legal status, length of stay in Germany, and the highest level of formal education accomplished.
- (ii)
- Health measures include subjective health status (measured on a Likert scale from 1 = very good to 5 = very bad), a binary assessment of chronic illness (“Do you have any longstanding illnesses or health problems?”) taken from the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS) [42], and screening items for depression (PHQ-2) and anxiety (GAD2) [43].
- (iii)
- Utilization of health services (general practitioner, specialist, psychotherapy/psychiatric care, hospitalization, emergency care) was assessed by means of EHIS items; namely, a binary variable (utilization/no utilization within the last 12 months) and a continuous variable (number of visits within the last 12 months).
- (iv)
- Access to healthcare was examined by means of adapted EHIS items. Two items asked about forgone general practitioner (GP) and specialist visits in the previous year (“During the past 12 months, was there any time when you really needed to consult a GP/specialist but did not?”). Another item measured the prevalence of ambulatory care-sensitive (ACS) hospitalizations by asking the respondent whether she/he had been hospitalized at least once for one of 15 ACS conditions (selected from a literature-based list, [44]) in the last 12 months. Moreover, respondents were asked about out-of-pocket expenses for prescribed medicines in the past month.
- (v)
- Measures of the social determinants of health included quality of life, social environment, and subjective social status. Quality of life was measured by means of the EUROHIS-QoL [45], a five-point, eight-item index score comprised of questions concerning overall life satisfaction (“How satisfied are you with your life?”), satisfaction with health (“How satisfied are you with your health?”), with oneself and personal relationships (“How satisfied are you with yourself/your personal relationships?”), and with the material situation (“How satisfied are you with the conditions of your living place?”, “Do you have enough money to meet your needs?”). Social environment indicators included three questions for family status taken from the EHIS (“What is your civil status?”, “If you have a partner/spouse, is he/she currently living with you?”, “How many children do you have?”), as well as the question “How many people are so close to you that you can count on them if you have a serious personal problem?”.Subjective social status was measured on a MacArthur scale (1 = bottom, 10 = top), a widely used tool with tested validity in diverse contexts [46,47,48]. Respondents were asked to rank their social status separately for the country of origin and the host country (“Please think of your situation in Germany: In our society, there are groups which tend to be towards the top and groups which tend to be towards the bottom. At the top are the people who are best off – those who have the most money, the highest education, the most respected jobs. At the bottom are the people who are the worst off – who have the least money, least education and the least respected jobs or no job. Below is a scale that runs from the top to the bottom. Where would you put yourself on this scale? […] Now please think of your country of origin: In your country of origin, there are groups…”).
2.3. Setting: The LGBTIQ Shelter in Berlin
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Sample
2.6. Data Analysis
2.7. Ethical Aspects
3. Results
3.1. Sociodemographic Characteristics and Social Determinants of Health
3.2. Health Status
3.3. Healthcare Utilization and Access to Care
4. Discussion
4.1. LGBTIQ Asylum-Seekers’ Health in Berlin—No Happy Ending, but a Silver Lining
4.2. LGBTIQ Asylum-Seekers’ Health as a Case-Study for Intersectionality in Migrant Health
4.3. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Asylum-Seekers from LGBTIQ Shelter (N = 32) | Asylum-Seekers from Other Shelters (N = 277) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | ||||
Female | 30% | 34% | ||
Male | 44% | 65% | ||
Other/Diverse | 26% | 1% | ||
n | 27 | 244 | ||
Age (in years, mean ± SD) | 29.5 ± 7 | 34.8 ± 12 | ||
n | 27 | 211 | ||
Highest level of education | ||||
no formal education | 5% | 34% | ||
mandatory schooling | 27% | 20% | ||
high school | 68% | 46% | ||
n | 22 | 223 | ||
Months in Germany (median ± meanAD) | 15 ± 22 | 36 ± 25 | ||
n | 24 | 189 | ||
Residence status | ||||
Asylum-seeker | 64% | 35% | ||
Asylum granted | 32% | 47% | ||
Asylum claim rejected | 4% | 18% | ||
n | 28 | 232 | ||
Quality of lifescore (mean ± SD, 1 = low to 5 = high) | 1.7 ± 0.9 | 2.2 ± 0.9 | ||
n | 25 | 263 | ||
Respondents with “no one to count on” | 41% | 36% | ||
n | 27 | 250 | ||
Subjective social status | Home country | Germany | Home country | Germany |
low | 50% | 76% | 40% | 56% |
middle | 33% | 12% | 26% | 29% |
high | 17% | 12% | 34% | 15% |
n | 29 | 255 |
Asylum-Seekers from LGBTIQ Shelter | Asylum-Seekers from other Shelters | Odds Ratio [95% CI] | |
---|---|---|---|
Good/Very good overall subjective health | 59% (17) | 51% (130) | 0.8 [0.31; 1.74] |
n | 29 | 255 | |
Chronic illness | 63% (17) * | 38% (94) | 2.8 [1.15; 7.13] |
n | 27 | 249 | |
Screened positive for depression and/or anxiety | 70% (19) ** | 34% (78) | 4.5 [1.79; 12.47] |
n | 27 | 227 |
Asylum-Seekers from LGBTIQ Shelter | Asylum-Seekers from Other Shelters | Odds Ratio [95% CI] | |
---|---|---|---|
Ambulatory care (GP and/or specialist) | 83% (19) * | 56% (130) | 3.71 [1.18; 15.46] |
n | 23 | 232 | |
Psychotherapy/Psychiatric care | 78% (18) ** | 19% (42) | 15.1 [5.04; 55.05] |
n | 23 | 221 | |
Emergency room | 62% (16) * | 34% (80) | 3.12 [1.27; 8.09] |
n | 26 | 234 | |
Hospitalization | 41% (13) | 24% (66) | 2.14 [0.92; 4.85] |
n | 32 | 277 | |
Ambulatory care-sensitive hospitalization | 36% (10) | 19% (47) | 2.30 [0.89; 5.68] |
n | 28 | 248 | |
Foregone GP and/or specialist visit | 58% (11) | 57% (118) | 1.01 [0.36; 3.04] |
n | 19 | 207 |
Respondents with a Mental Health Need | |||
from the LGBTIQ Shelter (N = 15) | from Other Shelters (N = 61) | Odds Ratio [95% CI] | |
Psychotherapy/Psychiatric Care | 87% (13) ** | 30% (18) | 14.9 [2.94; 149.5] |
Respondents with a Chronic Illness | |||
from the LGBTIQ Shelter (N = 17) | from Other Shelters (N = 94) | ||
Ambulatory Care | 65% (11) | 64% (60) | 3.4 [0.45; 157.6] |
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Gottlieb, N.; Püschmann, C.; Stenzinger, F.; Koelber, J.; Rasch, L.; Koppelow, M.; Al Munjid, R. Health and Healthcare Utilization among Asylum-Seekers from Berlin’s LGBTIQ Shelter: Preliminary Results of a Survey. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4514. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124514
Gottlieb N, Püschmann C, Stenzinger F, Koelber J, Rasch L, Koppelow M, Al Munjid R. Health and Healthcare Utilization among Asylum-Seekers from Berlin’s LGBTIQ Shelter: Preliminary Results of a Survey. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(12):4514. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124514
Chicago/Turabian StyleGottlieb, Nora, Conny Püschmann, Fabian Stenzinger, Julia Koelber, Laurette Rasch, Martha Koppelow, and Razan Al Munjid. 2020. "Health and Healthcare Utilization among Asylum-Seekers from Berlin’s LGBTIQ Shelter: Preliminary Results of a Survey" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 12: 4514. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124514
APA StyleGottlieb, N., Püschmann, C., Stenzinger, F., Koelber, J., Rasch, L., Koppelow, M., & Al Munjid, R. (2020). Health and Healthcare Utilization among Asylum-Seekers from Berlin’s LGBTIQ Shelter: Preliminary Results of a Survey. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(12), 4514. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124514