Assessing Virtual Mental Health Access for Refugees during the COVID-19 Pandemic Using the Levesque Client-Centered Framework: What Have We Learned and How Will We Plan for the Future?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Context of the Study
1.2. Conceptualizing the Role of Virtual Mental Health Services in Promoting Access and Improving Service Disparity
1.3. Theoretical Framework
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Context
2.2. Participant Recruitment and Procedures
2.2.1. Key Informants
2.2.2. Refugee Newcomer Clients
2.2.3. Front-Line Service Provider Interviews
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Qualitative Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.1.1. Front-Line Provider Professional Information
3.1.2. Representatives of Refugee Communities
3.2. Dimensions of VMH Service Accessibility
3.2.1. Approachability
...with COVID and with the isolation, many persons would probably–could have been going out to libraries or to a community center for something, I mean, [and] just by chance heard somebody talking about, “oh, you know, there’s a service, do we miss that piece?” So, no, it’s, it’s more so on organizations really trying to put a lot on perhaps their websites or on social media.(Mental health intake and assessment worker 1)
3.2.2. Acceptability
I find virtual, somehow, even if it doesn’t cover everything we’re supposed to cover as before- but trying to do the service from home and virtually—I’m being there for them, all the time; making them happy and feeling like there’s some people behind their back, they[‘re] helping them.(Mental health provider key informant 1)
[...] we are from an oral tradition. We talk much more than we write. So by textos or online, such as chatting with someone and e-mailing, it is not our tradition or nature. But talking with someone, like I told you, like now … At least you feel that there is someone on the other side.(Refugee newcomer 2)
I recently created support group for the LGBT community specifically for transgender female to male... Some of them, … They don’t want to appear on the camera because they belong to the same community. [...]they don’t want anybody to know that they are transgender or LGBT so I’m going to try again to do it in a different way.(Mental health provider key informant 2)
I remember I had a woman, she used to talk when her husband was outside. They try to figure out a time, yeah. Sometimes she calls and she says a few words, and she doesn’t discuss her situation—it’s really hard, it’s not easy.(Mental health provider key informant 3)
If they have to go in person, it could be a challenge. We have to arrange for interpretation. We have to arrange for transportation. We have, you know, but with virtual services they can even reach out to mental health therapist in [names different cities]...(Settlement service provider 1)
Again you know a lot of my staff team aren’t techie so trying to do a three-way call or getting someone outside of our organizations to join into a video has not been as efficient.(Agency director key informant 1)
[...] one of the considerations for the virtual platform is that the interpreter has to be able to easily access that platform, they have to be linked in, but just over the phone. I think if it’s three anonymous people [i.e., the client, the therapist, and the interpreter]…when it’s you as the provider (that maybe they’ve not met before), the patient, and then there’s this other person who speaks their language that they can’t see... I think sometimes, it’s a little bit- it depends again. It depends on the individual or even the group. I know that we’ve had a lot of issues with our Yazidi just because they are so distrustful because of their trauma.(Primary health care provider 1)
3.2.3. Availability and Accommodation
Sometimes you just have to see somebody and it just- I don’t have a sanctioned way to access people over video conferencing. … if I have them try to connect through Microsoft Teams, which is 100% confidential but it requires so much digital literacy people can’t access it, people just can’t. So I have to say this is a huge—it’s a huge frustration for me and telephone calls work only so far.(Primary health care provider 1)
3.2.4. Affordability
The issue with refugees, they have allowances from the federal government, it’s the resettlement assistance program and the allowance, so it’s not enough to pay for the Internet.(Mental health provider key informant 2)
3.2.5. Appropriateness
[T]he hardest thing is you’re feeling… [exhales] You don’t feel yourself connected to the person you are talking to, as if you are watching tv [...].(Refugee newcomer 4)
I try to adapt to the situation, you know. But yeah, I don’t necessarily like it, but it’s not bad. It’s better than nothing.(Refugee newcomer 1)
When it comes to a phone call, let us say now we may have language barrier and the way we talk as well; you may be talking with strong tone, which might seem that even if you are talking good words, they may feel you are yelling. [ehmmmm] this is because you have language problems you cannot express everything you want to say.(Refugee newcomer 5)
Sometimes I would go outside. I was like “well, strangers, they will listen to me” but they don’t know me right?(Refugee newcomer 3)
[...] Yeah, I had clients run around the room or maybe sometimes you know it’s not attentive, surfing, browsing website while they talk to you or they use their phone or they talk to other people on social media during the meeting with you, that happened a lot.(Mental health provider 1)
[B]ody language is missing quite a lot now and so generally it’s just upper body, so a lot more facial… I use my arms more so, to fill up this space, making a point. For example when a client’s crying… previously I might be able to pass a tissue box, and that is a message already. Meanwhile, now I have to compensate more verbally, [...] I might just have to fill up that he’s letting them know: “it’s OK, I’m still here, do you have a cup of water?” Do, you know, just whatever to fill up that space verbally.(Mental health provider key informant 4)
3.3. Dimensions of Service User’s Ability
3.3.1. Ability to Perceive
… the wife comes complaining about the husband or my client has been referred by the sponsor because they saw an issue when they went, like how he’s treating his wife, how he’s behaving.(Settlement service provider 2)
Distress was so much by COVID that they were going into a breaking down point, if it makes sense, and so some of them were actually kind of daring to kind of ask for help. COVID had made it possible for people to kind of seek help in a way because they were kind of breaking down that stigma; this is too much, I can’t manage it, the isolation and homeschooling and people was too much.(Community leader key informant 1)
3.3.2. Ability to Seek Care
Even if you got the information to connect with them, since you are newcomer and settling in a new place, it may not be convenient to contact them. However, their welcoming attitude and support was important.(Refugee newcomer 6)
3.3.3. Ability to Reach
I think for people who have difficulties are elderly, in navigating technology, and also for some women as well. The adult women, not the youth. [...] they may come from a village or they may never work before they came to Canada, so they just be home most of the time. So they’re not very computer literate as well. So those women [...] may have difficulties, and elderly.(Mental health provider 1)
Now there were very few clients who said: “I can’t do this, I have to stop therapy because I just don’t know how to do this online”. But our clients were actually more ingenious in adapting, [...] once we got used to Zoom, which we didn’t have very much time to get used to. Zoom, it’s quite comfortable, because there is space for the counselor, the interpreter, often other people join the client. You can see the whole family if you want to… It’s a little bit like a home visit and so things have worked surprisingly well. In fact, so well that when the time comes that we can go back to the in-person they probably still want to keep a mixture of in-person and online.(Agency director key informant 3)
3.3.4. Ability to Pay
I think I was lucky to be on O.W. [supplemental assistance for those with disabilities] and then I had a, like, a little bit of money to have, like, data on my phone, right? Otherwise, I know like some people...especially going to [name of organization removed], there are some people who are, like, struggling a lot with financial stuff and I wonder, like, how they get the services. And then if you, for example, if you prefer, like, a Zoom call, right, and you don’t have data or if you don’t have Wi-Fi, then how-- that’s challenging right?(Refugee newcomer 3)
3.3.5. Ability to Engage
[...] she just asked me which one I would prefer, and I said whatever, since I would want to have in-person service. This might be the reason that she chose for me, I didn’t give her clear answer.(Refugee newcomer 7)
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations and Future Research
4.2. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Key Informant Service Provider Interviews (n = 32) | |||||
AB 1 | BC 2 | ON 3 | QC 4 | Total | |
Program coordinators | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 (9.4%) |
Managers and directors | 0 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 6 (18.8%) |
Settlement workers | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 5 (15.6%) |
Primary care providers | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 (3.1%) |
Mental health providers | 1 | 2 | 7 | 4 | 14 (43.8%) |
Interpreters | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 3 (9.4%) |
Follow-up Service Provider Interviews (n = 31) | |||||
Program coordinators/ intake workers | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 (12.9%) |
Settlement workers | 0 | 0 | 4 | 6 | 10 (32.2%) |
Primary care providers | 1 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 6 (19.4%) |
Mental health providers | 0 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 11 (35.5%) |
Refugee Newcomer Clients (n = 37) | ||
Province of residence | n | % |
AB | 7 | 18.9 |
BC | 5 | 13.5 |
ON | 22 | 59.5 |
QC | 3 | 8.1 |
Country of origin | ||
Syria | 7 | 18.9 |
Eritrea | 7 | 18.9 |
Iran | 5 | 13.5 |
Ethiopia | 4 | 10.8 |
Columbia | 3 | 8.1 |
Somalia | 2 | 5.4 |
Other | 9 | 24.3 |
Years residing in Canada | ||
<1 | 4 | 10.8 |
1–2 | 20 | 54.0 |
2–3 | 6 | 16.2 |
4–5 | 7 | 18.9 |
First language | ||
Arabic | 7 | 18.9 |
Spanish | 7 | 18.9 |
Farsi | 6 | 16.2 |
Tigrinya | 6 | 16.2 |
Amharic | 5 | 13.5 |
Somali | 2 | 5.4 |
Other | 4 | 10.8 |
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Hynie, M.; Jaimes, A.; Oda, A.; Rivest-Beauregard, M.; Perez Gonzalez, L.; Ives, N.; Ahmad, F.; Kuo, B.C.H.; Arya, N.; Bokore, N.; et al. Assessing Virtual Mental Health Access for Refugees during the COVID-19 Pandemic Using the Levesque Client-Centered Framework: What Have We Learned and How Will We Plan for the Future? Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 5001. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19095001
Hynie M, Jaimes A, Oda A, Rivest-Beauregard M, Perez Gonzalez L, Ives N, Ahmad F, Kuo BCH, Arya N, Bokore N, et al. Assessing Virtual Mental Health Access for Refugees during the COVID-19 Pandemic Using the Levesque Client-Centered Framework: What Have We Learned and How Will We Plan for the Future? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(9):5001. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19095001
Chicago/Turabian StyleHynie, Michaela, Annie Jaimes, Anna Oda, Marjolaine Rivest-Beauregard, Laura Perez Gonzalez, Nicole Ives, Farah Ahmad, Ben C. H. Kuo, Neil Arya, Nimo Bokore, and et al. 2022. "Assessing Virtual Mental Health Access for Refugees during the COVID-19 Pandemic Using the Levesque Client-Centered Framework: What Have We Learned and How Will We Plan for the Future?" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 9: 5001. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19095001
APA StyleHynie, M., Jaimes, A., Oda, A., Rivest-Beauregard, M., Perez Gonzalez, L., Ives, N., Ahmad, F., Kuo, B. C. H., Arya, N., Bokore, N., & McKenzie, K. (2022). Assessing Virtual Mental Health Access for Refugees during the COVID-19 Pandemic Using the Levesque Client-Centered Framework: What Have We Learned and How Will We Plan for the Future? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(9), 5001. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19095001