| Literature DB >> 24199588 |
Chandni Joshi, Grant Russell, I-Hao Cheng, Margaret Kay, Kevin Pottie, Margaret Alston, Mitchell Smith, Bibiana Chan, Shiva Vasi, Winston Lo, Sayed Shukrullah Wahidi, Mark F Harris1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Refugees have many complex health care needs which should be addressed by the primary health care services, both on their arrival in resettlement countries and in their transition to long-term care. The aim of this narrative synthesis is to identify the components of primary health care service delivery models for such populations which have been effective in improving access, quality and coordination of care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24199588 PMCID: PMC3835619 DOI: 10.1186/1475-9276-12-88
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Key definitions used in the review
| Refugee | A refugee is a person forced to flee his or her home due to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, and who is unable or unwilling to return to his or her country of origin [ |
| Primary health care | Primary care is the level of the health service system “that provides entry into the system for all new needs and problems. Primary care provides person-centred care over the continuum of time, assistance for all common conditions, and co-ordinates and integrates care provided by others” [ |
| • Assessment of health on arrival, including identification of infectious disease, mental health | |
| • Ongoing management of acute or chronic illnesses, mental illnesses, psychosocial illnesses | |
| • Provision of preventive care | |
| • Referral to or links with more specialised medical services | |
| • Referral, links to or provision of social care, housing, employment, education, or legal advice. | |
| Model of care | A model of care describes the way in which a complex range of health services are organised and delivered [ |
| • health service funding/cost to clients/system: government, non-government organisation, private | |
| • provider workforce: e.g. general practitioners, nurses, social workers, allied health | |
| • organisation: team, network, integrated service | |
| Access to the service | Access is the opportunity or ease with which consumers or communities are able to use appropriate services in proportion to their need [ |
| • Availability of a sufficient volume of services (including professionals, facilities and programmes) to match the needs of the population and the location of services close to those needing them | |
| • Affordability (cost versus consumers’ ability to pay, impact of health care costs on socioeconomic circumstances of patients) | |
| • Accommodation – the delivery of services in such a manner that those in need of them can use them without difficulty (e.g. appropriate hours of opening, accessible buildings) | |
| • Appropriateness to socioeconomic, educational, cultural and linguistic needs of patients | |
| • Acceptability in terms of consumer attitudes and demands | |
| Coordination of care | This involves coordination of care between multiple providers and services with the aim of achieving improved quality of care and common goals for patients [ |
| • Care planning | |
| • Informal communication between workers or services | |
| • Team meeting, case conferences, interagency meetings | |
| • Shared assessments and records | |
| • Coordination with non-health services including language services (interpreters, translated health information), formal settlement services, torture and trauma services | |
| • Referral pathways and inter-service agreements | |
| Quality of care | We define quality of care as the consistency of clinical care with recommendations in evidence-based guidelines as well as the quality of interpersonal care [ |
| Case management | Case management has been variously defined. In this study we defined it as a collaborative process of assessment, planning, facilitation, care coordination, evaluation, and advocacy for options and services to meet an individual’s and family’s comprehensive health needs through communication and available resources to promote quality cost effective outcomes [ |
Figure 1Framework describing impact of primary health care service delivery models (adapated from Hogg et al.) [[29]].
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram on selection of papers for the review.
Characteristics of the models and their impacts
| Cheng et al. 2011 | Australia | Increased utilisation of services. | |
| Sypek et al. 2008 | Australia | Barriers: cost, interpreter access, bulk billing doctors, unmet mental health needs, dental health and specialised auditory treatment. | |
| Geltman and Cochran 2005 | United States | Timely health screening. | |
| Eytan et al. 2002 | Switzerland | Increased referral to medical and psychological care. | |
| Ford 1995 | United States | Increased use of preventive and curative care. | |
| Mitchell 1997 | Australia | Good coordination among service providers. | |
| Grigg-Saito et al. 2010 | United States | Improved physical and mental health status. | |
| Gould et al. 2010 | Australia | Timely medical care. | |
| Birman et al. 2008 | United States | Improved mental health. | |
| Goodkind 2005 | United States | Improved mental health. | |
| Fox et al. 2005 | United States | Improved mental health. | |
| Barrett et al. 2000 | Australia | Service culturally acceptable, reduced levels of anxiety. | |
| Clabots and Dolphin 1992 | United States | Culturally sensitive and appropriate for clients. | |
| Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009 | Australia | Improved access to preventive care (health checks and immunisation), improved communication and coordination between providers. | |
| Kelly 2008 | Australia | Improved access to primary health care and specialist services, increased number of patients from refugee backgrounds, good coordination among services. | |
| Department of Health and Human Services, 2010 | Australia | Increased use of interpreters and culturally aware staff. | |
| Difficulty accessing refugee health nurse, bicultural workers, culturally appropriate interpreters and mental health services. | |||
| Companion House 2009 | Australia | Improvement in mental health, difficulty accessing medicines due to cost. | |
| Sheikh and MacIntyre 2009 | Australia | Increased clinic attendance and enhanced knowledge on preventive care. | |
| Smith 2009 | Australia | Client satisfaction with multilingual staff. Ineffective referral to non-health services, lack of mental health service, non-representative interpreters. | |
| O’Donnell et al. 2007 | United Kingdom | Increased GP registration, trust built between patients and health services. | |
| Pottie and Hosland 2007 | Canada | Patient satisfaction, increase in trust between patients and health care providers, increased knowledge of health system and easier access. Interpreter service was not reliable. | |
| Samaan 2004 | Australia | Client satisfaction with onsite interpreters and patient advocacy. | |
| Barriers: cost, lack of local transport | |||
| Interpreter access, non-representative interpreting, lack of bulk billing doctors, difficulty in physical access for people with disabilities and remote location. | |||
| Department of Health 2011 | Australia | Enhanced access to services, culturally appropriate service, good coordination among services and continuum of care. | |
| Robson 2011 | Australia | Client satisfaction, staffs of other organisation confident on coordinating care with the centre, increased access to preventive care. | |
| Western Region Health Centre 2001 | Australia | Clients satisfied about information on accessing different services including transport. | |
| Problems with cultural competency in spite of receiving training, time management for staffs due to longer consultations and dissatisfaction with long waiting time, inadequate follow up, unnecessary referrals in absence of interpreters, interpreting service non-representative. | |||
| Coordination with some service providers was good while there was a lack of coordination with many of them. | |||
Characteristics of models of PHC for refugees and their corresponding evaluated components
| Service context | Organisational | Specialist service | Ford et al. 1995 |
| Part of a hospital | Sypek et al. 2008; Samaan 2004 | ||
| Location | Urban | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health 2011; Grigg-Saito et al. 2010; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Sheikh & MacIntyre 2009; Smith 2009; Birman et al. 2008; Fox et al. 2005; Eytan et al. 2002; Western Region Health Centre 2001; Mitchell 1997; Clabots and Dolphin 1992 | |
| Rural | Gould et al. 2010; Sypek et al. 2008 | ||
| State | Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Samaan 2004 | ||
| Partnerships | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Smith 2009; Samaan 2004; Western Region Health Centre 2001 | ||
| Media | Sheikh & MacIntyre 2009 | ||
| Clinical model | Case management | Robson 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Smith 2009; Birman et al. 2008 Samaan 2004; Cheng et al. 2011; Western Region Health Centre 2001; Mitchell 1997 | |
| Care planning | Cheng et al. 2011 | ||
| Outreach | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Grigg-Saito et al. 2010; Smith 2009; Birman et al. 2008; Kelly 2008; Pottie & Hosland 2007; Goodkind 2005; Samaan 2004; Mitchell 1997; Ford et al. 1995 | ||
| Health checks | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; O’Donnell et al. 2007 | ||
| Referral pathways | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Samaan 2004; Western Region Health Centre 2001; Ford et al. 1995 | ||
| Workforce | Specialised workers (refugee nurses) | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Smith 2009; Kelly 2008; O’Donnell et al. 2007; Western Region Health Centre 2001 | |
| Training (cross-cultural) | Grigg-Saito et al. 2010; Pottie & Hosland 2007; Western Region Health Centre 2001 | ||
| Bilingual workers, interpreters | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Grigg-Saito et al. 2010; Smith 2009; Birman et al. 2008; Fox et al. 2005; Goodkind 2005; Samaan 2004; Eytan et al. 2002; Barrett et al. 2000; Mitchell 1997; Ford et al. 1995; Clabots and Dolphin 1992 | ||
| Students and volunteers | Cheng et al. 2011; Pottie & Hosland 2007; Goodking 2005; Samaan 2004 | ||
| Cost to clients | No-cost or subsidised | Gould et al. 2010; Kelly 2008; Samaan 2004; Ford et al. 1995 | |
| Health Services | Screening/prevention | Robson 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Gould et al. 2010; Geltman and Cochran 2005; Samaan 2004; Ford et al. 1995 | |
| Mental health | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Companion House 2009; Birman et al. 2008; Sypek et al. 2008; Fox et al. 2005; Goodkind 2005; Samaan 2004; Barrett et al. 2000 | ||
| Dental health | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health 2011; Robson 2011; Gould et al. 2010; Smith 2009; Kelly 2008; Samaan 2004 | ||
| Physical: general practitioner, eye, maternal and child health, infectious disease/immunisation | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health 2011; Robson 2011; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Sheikh & MacIntyre 2009; Kelly 2008; Samaan 2004; Western Region Health Centre 2001; Ford et al. 1995 | ||
| Allied health | Cheng et al. 2011; Robson 2011; Smith 2009; Samaan 2004; Western Region Health Centre 2001 | ||
| Medical specialist referral | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health 2011; Robson 2011; Gould et al. 2010; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Mitchell 1997 | ||
| Health education | Robson 2011; Sheikh & MacIntyre 2009; Smith 2009; Pottie and Hosland 2007; Mitchell 1997; Clabots and Dolphin 1992 | ||
| Non-health services | Transport | Gould et al. 2010; Smith 2009; Birman et al. 2008; Kelly 2008; Samaan 2004; | |
| Housing | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health 2011; Sypek et al. 2008; Mitchell 1997 | ||
| Education and information | Cheng et al. 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Gould et al. 2010; Australian Resource Centre for Healthcare Innovations 2009; Smith 2009; Pottie & Hosland 2007; Western Region Health Centre 2001; Mitchell 1997; Clabots and Dolphin 1992 | ||
| Patient advocacy | Robson 2011; Department of Health and Human Services 2010; Smith 2009; Birman et al. 2008; Kelly 2008; Samaan 2004; Mitchell 1997 | ||