| Literature DB >> 24552123 |
Melanie Gibson-Helm, Jacqueline Boyle, Andrew Block, Helena Teede1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Routine public health databases contain a wealth of data useful for research among vulnerable or isolated groups, who may be under-represented in traditional medical research. Identifying specific vulnerable populations, such as resettled refugees, can be particularly challenging; often country of birth is the sole indicator of whether an individual has a refugee background. The objective of this article was to review strengths and weaknesses of different methodological approaches to identifying resettled refugees and comparison groups from routine health datasets and to propose the application of additional methodological rigour in future research. DISCUSSION: Methodological approaches to selecting refugee and comparison groups from existing routine health datasets vary widely and are often explained in insufficient detail. Linked data systems or datasets from specialized refugee health services can accurately select resettled refugee and asylum seeker groups but have limited availability and can be selective. In contrast, country of birth is commonly collected in routine health datasets but a robust method for selecting humanitarian source countries based solely on this information is required. The authors recommend use of national immigration data to objectively identify countries of birth with high proportions of humanitarian entrants, matched by time period to the study dataset. When available, additional migration indicators may help to better understand migration as a health determinant. Methodologically, if multiple countries of birth are combined, the proportion of the sample represented by each country of birth should be included, with sub-analysis of individual countries of birth potentially providing further insights, if population size allows. United Nations-defined world regions provide an objective framework for combining countries of birth when necessary. A comparison group of economic migrants from the same world region may be appropriate if the resettlement country is particularly diverse ethnically or the refugee group differs in many ways to those born in the resettlement country.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24552123 PMCID: PMC3932110 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-14-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Methods used to select individuals of refugee background
| Linked data systems | Norredam, Garcia-Lopez, Keiding et al. 2009 [ | • Uses a precise definition to accurately select individuals who have humanitarian residence permits. | • Use of the authority definition may misclassify individuals who have a refugee background but a non-humanitarian residence permit. |
| Hollander, Bruce, Burstrom et al. 2011 [ | |||
| • Can be used to select asylum seekers and/or refugees as separate groups. | |||
| • Not available in all countries or datasets so can be difficult to reproduce the method. | |||
| • Facilitates simple results interpretation as the reader can be confident the sample is made up of individuals with a refugee background. | |||
| • May be difficulties comparing to countries that have different migration systems or authority definitions. | |||
| Datasets from specialized health services | Johnston, Smith & Roydhouse 2011 [ | • Uses a precise definition to accurately select individuals who have humanitarian residence permits. | • Excludes individuals who have a refugee background but a non-humanitarian residence permit. |
| Martin & Mak 2006 [ | • Can be used to select asylum seekers and/or refugees as separate groups. | • Some to individuals of refugee background may not access specialized refugee health services, thus findings may not generalizable to whole refugee population. | |
| • Facilitates simple results interpretation as the reader can be confident the sample is made up of individuals with a refugee background. | |||
| • Residence permit type not commonly collected so can be difficult to reproduce the method using non-specialized datasets. | |||
| • May be difficulties comparing to countries that have different migration systems or authority definitions. | |||
| COB alone as proxy for refugee background | Correa-Velez, Sundararajan, Brown et al. 2007 [ | • Commonly collected by routine health datasets and therefore an easily reproducible method. | • Accuracy of selecting individuals of refugee background relies on an estimate of what proportion of individuals from each country of birth would be expected to be refugees. |
| Correa-Velez & Ryan 2011 [ | |||
| • Can be used to compare findings from countries that have different migration systems or authority definitions. | |||
| • Cannot be used to specifically select asylum seekers. | |||
| • Not always enough information given to be confident the sample is primarily made up of individuals with a refugee background. |