Communication Experiences in Primary Healthcare with Refugees and Asylum Seekers: A Literature Review and Narrative Synthesis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Selection Criteria
2.2.1. Population
2.2.2. Study Design
2.3. Data Extraction and Quality Assessment
2.4. Data Analysis and Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Linguistic Barriers
3.1.1. Qualitative Studies
“The times that I have needed it they have been–appointments have been booked well in advance. How do you book an interpreter when someone rings up at lunchtime and sees you two hours later for something that is minor or insignificant?”—HCP [34]
“Sometimes it is okay, but in the majority of the cases it is better with the authorized interpreters since they are more familiar with the medical terminology. So it is always a poorer consultation. It is typically the family being used and I feel they shouldn’t be there at all”—HCP [33]
“Sometimes you will see a client who does not want to work with an interpreter, especially in small communities there are limited numbers of interpreters from that community. The client may know the interpreter or know people who know the interpreter and they will worry about confidentiality. That causes a lot of embarrassment for women…”—HCP [38]
“When you get a translator and the translator doesn’t really get you the translation in details. Some of them just talk and talk and then when it comes to the translator, he can’t put the words the [right] way...”—patient [24]
“Inevitably there were misunderstandings during her GP consultations and, on one occasion, her son who had diarrhoea was prescribed medication for constipation...”—patient [35]
3.1.2. Quantitative Studies
3.2. Clinician Cues
“When you sit with a doctor and you hear kind words, that has an influence on your nerves, on your body. You start feeling better, healthier, than when the doctor is angry.”—patient [27]
“We don’t have anybody here. It is very important that the doctor is friendly.”—patient [28]
“I did not give him the medical file, because he was not interested. My expectation was somebody who will be open to me, like doctors in Africa.”—patient [26]
“That generalizing attitude is what still makes me angry.”—patient [26]
“To show that you are interested in the person, not only in the disease; to show that you want to know something about the context. Sometimes it is difficult to find time for it in a busy practice, but I see it is a worthwhile investment…”—HCP [27]
3.3. Cultural Understanding
“Give her a woman translator, so that she can be open to tell all the problems”—patient [24]
“Religion sometimes says it is good for you to have [a] female doctor if you are female”—patient [24]
“They have a different culture, so their cultural perception of symptoms and what they mean... trying to interpret the difference between a bloated abdomen and a painful abdomen, just becomes an impossible task...”—HCP [25]
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Declarations
Consent for Publication
Availability of Data and Materials
Abbreviations
Appendix A. Search Terms Used For Database Searches
- 1.
- Pop
- or.
- Asylum seek$
- or.
- (forced migrant$)
- or.
- (involuntary migrant$)
- or.
- Migrant$
- 2.
- AND
- or.
- Nurs$
- or.
- (General practi$)
- or.
- (community health centr$)
- or.
- (community clinic$)
- 3.
- AND
- or.
- Languag$
- or.
- Translat$
- or.
- Perception$
- or.
- Experienc$
- or.
- Attitude$
- or.
- View$
- or.
- Facilitat$
- or.
- Barrier$
- or.
- Challenge$
- or.
- Interact$
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Author | Year | Country | Population (Service Users) | Setting (Service Provider/Setting) | Number | Data Collection Method | Analysis Methodology | Quality Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adair et al. [23] | 1999 | United States of America | Refugees (Somali) | Primary care clinic—both doctors and nurses | 38 patients, 6 nurses, 32 doctors | Refugees—semi-structured telephone interviews Medical professional-survey questions | Quantitative analysis | 8 |
Carroll et al. [24] | 2007 | United States of America | Refugee women (Somali) | Primary care provider | 34 refugees | Refugees—in depth interviews | Grounded theory | 9 |
Farley et al. [25] | 2014 | Australia | Newly arrived refugees | General Practitioners, nurses, admin staff | 20 GPs b, 5 nurse, 11 admin staff | HCP c—focus groups and semi-structured interview | Inductive thematic analysis | 9 |
Feldmann et al. [26] | 2006 | Netherlands | Refugees (Somali) | General Practitioners | 36 refugees | Refugees—in depth interviews | Thematic analysis | 7 |
Feldmann et al. [27] | 2007 | Netherlands | Refugees (Afghan/Somali) | General Practitioners | 66 Refugees, 24 GPs | Refugees—in depth interviews GPs—semi structured interviews | Thematic analysis | 7 |
Feldmann et al. [28] | 2007 | Netherlands | Refugees (Afghan) | General Practitioners | 30 refugees | Refugees—in depth interviews | Thematic analysis | 7 |
Feldmann et al. [29] | 2007 | Netherlands | Refugees (Afghan/Somali) | General Practitioners | 24 GPs | Interviews (refugees and GPs) | General narrative | 6 |
Grut et al. [30] | 2006 | Norway | Refugees | General Practitioners | 12 GPs | GP—interviews | Narrative synthesis | 6 |
Gurnah et al. [31] | 2011 | United States of America | Refugee women (Somali Bantu) | Reproductive health service | 14 refugees | Refugee—interviews, focus group and semi-structured survey | Thematic analysis | 8 |
Harris [6] | 2018 | Australia | Refugees | General Practice | n/a a | n/a | Opinion article | 6 |
Harris and Zwar [32] | 2005 | Australia | Refugees | General Practice | n/a | n/a | Opinion article | 6 |
Jensen et al. [33] | 2013 | Denmark | Refugees | General Practitioners | 9 GPs | GP—semi structured interviews | Content analysis | 8 |
Johnson et al. [34] | 2008 | Australia | Refugees | General Practitioners | 12 GPs | GP—semi structured interviews | Template analysis | 8 |
MacFarlane et al. [35] | 2009 | Ireland | Refugees and asylum seekers | General Practitioners | 26 refugees | Refugees—semi-structured interviews | Thematic analysis | 9 |
MacFarlane et al. [36] | 2008 | Ireland | Refugees and asylum seekers | General Practitioners | 56 GPs | GP—telephone survey | Quantitative analysis | 8 |
Manchikanti et al. [37] | 2017 | Australia | Refugees (Afghan) | General Practice | 18 refugees | Refugees—in depth, semi-structured interviews | Thematic analysis | 8 |
Mengesha et al. [38] | 2018 | Australia | Refugees | General Practitioners, nurses, midwife | 5 GPs, 8 nurses, 1 midwife | HCP—semi-structured interviews | Thematic analysis | 8 |
O’Donnell et al. [39] | 2008 | Scotland (UK) | Asylum seekers | General Practice | 52 refugees | Asylum seekers—focus groups and semi-structured interview | Thematic analysis | 9 |
O’Donnell et al. [40] | 2007 | Scotland (UK) | Asylum seekers | General Practice | 52 refugees | Asylum seekers—focus groups, one-on-one interviews or group interviews | Thematic analysis | 9 |
Pottie [41] | 2007 | Canada | Refugees | Family physician | 1 refugee | Refugee—case report | 5 | |
Svenberg et al. [42] | 2011 | Sweden | Refugees (Somali) | General Practice | 20 refugees | Refugee—interviews | hermeneutic approach | 7 |
Author | Study Aims and Objectives | Outcomes Measures | Study Outcomes/Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|
Adair et al. [23] | To identify barriers to healthcare access perceived by a group of refugees from Somalia and by the doctors and nurses providing care for them. | Somali and HCPa responses to questions regarding transportation to clinic, payment for medical care, availability of interpreters and satisfaction with the level of communication achieved, comfort with being examined, and obtaining of medical care at multiple clinics. | Nurses and doctors who provide care for these patients and are quite familiar with their demographic characteristics but were inaccurate in predicting how they felt about access to care. |
Carroll et al. [24] | To identify characteristics associated with favourable treatment in receipt of preventive healthcare services, from the perspective of resettled African refugee women. | African refugee women’s response to questions about positive and negative experiences with primary healthcare services, beliefs about respectful vs. disrespectful treatment, experiences of racism, prejudice or bias, and ideas about removing access barriers and improving healthcare services. | Qualities associated with a favorable healthcare experience included effective verbal and nonverbal communication, feeling valued and understood, availability of female interpreters and clinicians and sensitivity to privacy for gynecologic concerns. |
Farley et al. [25] | To explore the experiences of general practices working within this new model, focusing on the barriers and enablers they continue to experience in providing care to refugees. | HCP responses to questions regarding barriers and enablers experienced when providing refugee healthcare and the resources providers felt would assist them in this task. | HCP working with refugees were enthusiastic and committed. The flexibility of the general practice setting enables providers to be innovative in their approach to caring for refugees. However, most practices continue to feel isolated as they search for solutions. |
Feldmann et al. [28] | What are participants’ frames of reference, in respect of healthcare, and what is their definition of health? How did participants try to solve their health-related problems and what was their experience of the process? What personal and social resources were useful to them? How can we explain differences between participants’ experiences of healthcare and their interpretations of their experiences? | Refugee responses to questions regarding healthcare experiences, health-related problems and social and personal resources used in healthcare. | The elements that constituted positive and negative episodes and led to the development or undermining of trust were identified in the narratives. Negative experience tended to be interpreted as a sign of prejudice on the part of the HCP. |
Feldmann et al. [26] | Which frames of reference play a role in the development over time of an individual refugee’s relationship with the Dutch healthcare system, in particular with the GP? | Refugee responses to questions regarding healthcare in country of origin and healthcare in the Netherlands. | For a positive relationship to develop, based on trust, GPs need to invest in the relationship with individual refugees, and avoid actions based on prejudice. |
Feldmann et al. [29] | What do refugees and general practitioner say about physically inexplicable somatic complaints? | GPs’ perspectives on medically unexplained physical symptoms presented by their refugee patients, strategies to address this and problems assisting refugee patients. | The personal attitude and communication skills of the practitioner appear to be central to building or undermining trust. |
Feldmann et al. [27] | To confront the views of refugee patients and general practitioners in the Netherlands, focusing on medically unexplained physical symptoms. | Refugees’ perspectives on health, illness and mental worries, their expectations from doctors and problems dealing with Dutch doctors. GPs’ perspectives on medically unexplained physical symptoms presented by their refugee patients, strategies to address this and problems assisting refugee patients. | GPs need to invest in the relationship with individual refugees, and avoid actions based on prejudice. |
Grut et al. [30] | What challenges do the regular GPs experience in meeting these patients (refugee backgrounds)? | GP responses to questions about the challenges about meeting patients from refugee backgrounds. | GPs need more guidance materials to adapt to cultural challenges of treating refugee patients. |
Gurnah et al. [31] | Explore the reproductive health experiences of Somali Bantu women in Connecticut, to identify potential barriers to care experienced by marginalized populations. | Somali women’s response to questions regarding perceptions of barriers to reproductive healthcare. | There was a lack of cultural fluency between patients and provider. There is a need for developing cultural competency in health care delivery. |
Harris and Zwar [32] | n/ac | n/a | Refugees and asylum seekers come to Australia with a range of health problems related to their experience both overseas and in Australia. These problems need to be addressed in general practice, as should preventive care, which is often overlooked. |
Harris [6] | n/a | n/a | Need for more integrated health service provision for people from refugee backgrounds, based on trust and communication. |
Jensen et al. [33] | To investigate how general practitioners experience providing care to refugees with mental health problems. | GP responses to questions regarding delivery of care to immigrants in general, and delivery of care to patients with different immigration status. | Findings suggest that the development of conversational models for general practitioners including points to be aware of in the treatment of refugee patients may serve as a support in the management of refugee patients in primary care. |
Johnson et al. [34] | To document the existence and nature of challenges for GPs who do this work in South Australia. To explore the ways in which these challenges could be reduced. To discuss the policy implications of this in relation to optimising the initial healthcare for refugees | GP responses to questions regarding challenges in providing initial care to refugees, suggestions on how to reduce challenges and ways to optimise initial healthcare for refugees. | GPs in this study were under-resourced, at both an individual GP level as well as a structural level, to provide effective initial care for refugees. |
MacFarlane et al. [35] | Exploration of the elements of that experience in terms of their access to informal interpreters, choices and trade-offs about who to ask and negotiations with general practitioners about their use. | Asylum seeker responses to questions around use of health services; barriers and facilitators to accessing care; use of secondary care services; experience of translators; and previous experience of healthcare in responders’ country of origin. | Overall, service users experience a tension between the value of having someone present to act as their interpreter and the burden of work and responsibility to manage the language barrier. |
MacFarlane et al. [36] | Quantify the need for language assistance in general practice consultations and examine the experience of, and satisfaction with, methods of language assistance utilised. | GPb responses to questions regarding the need for language assistance, their knowledge and use of professional interpreters and use of informal interpreters | The need for language assistance in consultations with refugees and asylum seekers in Irish general practice is high. General practitioners rely on informal responses. |
Manchikanti et al. [37] | To investigate the acceptability of general practitioner (GP) services and understand what aspects of acceptability are relevant for Afghan refugees. | Refugees responses to questions regarding access to primary healthcare. | The findings reinforce the importance of tailoring healthcare delivery to the evolving needs and healthcare expectations of newly arrived and established refugees, respectively. |
Mengesha et al. [38] | To explore the healthcare professional (HCP) experiences of working with interpreters when consulting refugee and migrant women who are not proficient in English around sexual and reproductive health issues. | HCP responses to questions regarding their recent encounters with refugee and migrant women not proficient in English language in sexual and reproductive healthcare. | Communication barriers in the provision of sexual reproductive health services to refugee and migrant women may not be avoided despite the use of interpreters. |
O’Donnell et al. [39] | How migrants’ previous knowledge and experience of healthcare influences their current expectations of healthcare in a system relying on clinical generalists performing a gatekeeping role. | Asylum seekers response to health services; barriers and facilitators to accessing care; use of secondary care services; experience of translators; and previous experience of health care in responders’ country of origin. | HCPs need to be aware that experience of different systems of care can have an impact on individuals’ expectations in a GP- led system. |
O’Donnell et al. [40] | To identify the barriers and facilitators to accessing healthcare, both medical and dental, and to explore the healthcare needs and beliefs of asylum seekers. | Asylum seeker responses to discussion around health services; barriers and facilitators to accessing care; use of secondary care services; use of dental services; experience of translators; and previous experience of healthcare in their own country. | The findings highlight issues of access to timely health care and the role of interpreters within the consultation. In addition to understanding the role of GPs and the UK health system. |
Pottie [41] | n/a | n/a | The quality of patient care is improved with the use of professional interpreters. |
Svenberg et al. [42] | To explore Somali refugees’ experience of their encounters with Swedish healthcare. | Refugees’ responses to questions regarding their and their family’s experience with meeting Swedish healthcare. | Interpretation of the findings suggests unfulfilled expectations of the medical encounters, resulting in disappointment among the Somali informants. This entailed a lack of trust and feelings of rejection and, ultimately, decisions to seek private medical care abroad. |
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Patel, P.; Bernays, S.; Dolan, H.; Muscat, D.M.; Trevena, L. Communication Experiences in Primary Healthcare with Refugees and Asylum Seekers: A Literature Review and Narrative Synthesis. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041469
Patel P, Bernays S, Dolan H, Muscat DM, Trevena L. Communication Experiences in Primary Healthcare with Refugees and Asylum Seekers: A Literature Review and Narrative Synthesis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(4):1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041469
Chicago/Turabian StylePatel, Pinika, Sarah Bernays, Hankiz Dolan, Danielle Marie Muscat, and Lyndal Trevena. 2021. "Communication Experiences in Primary Healthcare with Refugees and Asylum Seekers: A Literature Review and Narrative Synthesis" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 4: 1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041469
APA StylePatel, P., Bernays, S., Dolan, H., Muscat, D. M., & Trevena, L. (2021). Communication Experiences in Primary Healthcare with Refugees and Asylum Seekers: A Literature Review and Narrative Synthesis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), 1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18041469