Literature DB >> 29284761

Refugees in Conflict: Creating a Bridge Between Traditional and Conventional Health Belief Models.

Eran Ben-Arye1,2, Massimo Bonucci3, Michel Daher4, Rejin Kebudi5, Bashar Saad6,7, Thomas Breitkreuz8, Maryam Rassouli9, Elio Rossi10,11, Nahla Gafer12, Omar Nimri13, Mohamed Hablas14, Gunver Sophia Kienle15, Noah Samuels16, Michael Silbermann17.   

Abstract

The recent wave of migration from Middle Eastern countries to Europe presents significant challenges to the European health profession. These include the inevitable communication gap created by differences in health care beliefs between European oncologists, health care practitioners, and refugee patients. This article presents the conclusions of a workshop attended by a group of clinicians and researchers affiliated with the Middle East Cancer Consortium, as well as four European-based health-related organizations. Workshop participants included leading clinicians and medical educators from the field of integrative medicine and supportive cancer care from Italy, Germany, Turkey, Israel, Palestine, Iran, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, and Sudan. The workshop illustrated the need for creating a dialogue between European health care professionals and the refugee population in order to overcome the communication barriers to create healing process. The affinity for complementary and traditional medicine (CTM) among many refugee populations was also addressed, directing participants to the mediating role that integrative medicine serves between CTM and conventional medicine health belief models. This is especially relevant to the use of herbal medicine among oncology patients, for whom an open and nonjudgmental (yet evidence-based) dialogue is of utmost importance. The workshop concluded with a recommendation for the creation of a comprehensive health care model, to include bio-psycho-social and cultural-spiritual elements, addressing both acute and chronic medical conditions. These models need to be codesigned by European and Middle Eastern clinicians and researchers, internalizing a culturally sensitive approach and ethical commitment to the refugee population, as well as indigenous groups originating from Middle Eastern and north African countries. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: European oncologists face a communication gap with refugee patients who have recently immigrated from Middle Eastern and northern African countries, with their different health belief models and affinity for traditional and herbal medicine. A culturally sensitive approach to care will foster doctor-refugee communication, through the integration of evidence-based medicine within a nonjudgmental, bio-psycho-social-cultural-spiritual agenda, addressing patients' expectation within a supportive and palliative care context. Integrative physicians, who are conventional doctors trained in traditional/complementary medicine, can mediate between conventional and traditional/herbal paradigms of care, facilitating doctor-patient communication through education and by providing clinical consultations within conventional oncology centers. © AlphaMed Press 2017.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cross‐cultural medicine; Doctor‐patient dialogue; Integrative medicine; Middle East; Refugees; Traditional medicine

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29284761      PMCID: PMC6067929          DOI: 10.1634/theoncologist.2017-0490

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncologist        ISSN: 1083-7159


  18 in total

1.  Refugees in the eastern Mediterranean region.

Authors:  Kamel Aljouni; Yagob Y Al-Mazrou; Walid S Ammar; Abdallah S Daar; Nils Daulaire; Majid Ezzati; Mahmoud Fathalla; Didier P Houssin; Ilona Kickbusch; Abdelhay Mechbal; Hoda M Rashad; Belgacem Sabri
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2015-12-18       Impact factor: 79.321

2.  Wheatgrass in Afifi's garden: sprouting integrative oncology collaborations in the Middle East.

Authors:  Eran Ben-Arye; Elad Schiff; Mariana Steiner; Michael Silbermann
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2011-01-10       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  Integration of complementary medicine in supportive cancer care: survey of health-care providers' perspectives from 16 countries in the Middle East.

Authors:  Eran Ben-Arye; Elad Schiff; Kamer Mutafoglu; Suha Omran; Ramzi Hajjar; Haris Charalambous; Tahani Dweikat; Ibtisam Ghrayeb; Gil Bar Sela; Ibrahim Turker; Azza Hassan; Esmat Hassan; Ariela Popper-Giveon; Bashar Saad; Omar Nimri; Rejin Kebudi; Jamal Dagash; Michael Silbermann
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2015-01-24       Impact factor: 3.603

Review 4.  Migrants' Health in Iran from the Perspective of Social Justice: a Systematic Literature Review.

Authors:  Ehsan Shamsi Gooshki; Raheleh Rezaei; Verina Wild
Journal:  Arch Iran Med       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 1.354

5.  Unmonitored use of herbal medicine by patients with breast cancer: reframing expectations.

Authors:  Noah Samuels; Eran Ben-Arye; Yair Maimon; Raanan Berger
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-06-30       Impact factor: 4.553

6.  Refugee children with cancer in Turkey.

Authors:  Rejin Kebudi; Ibrahim Bayram; Begul Yagci-Kupeli; Serhan Kupeli; Gulay Sezgin; Esra Pekpak; Yesim Oymak; Dilek Ince; Suna Emir; Deniz Tugcu; Gulcihan Ozek; Ali Bay; Funda Tayfun Kupesiz; Sema Vural; Suheyla Ocak; Yontem Yaman; Yavuz Koksal; Cetin Timur; Selma Unal; Canan Vergin
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 41.316

7.  A prospective, controlled study of the botanical compound mixture LCS101 for chemotherapy-induced hematological complications in breast cancer.

Authors:  Neora Yaal-Hahoshen; Yair Maimon; Nava Siegelmann-Danieli; Shahar Lev-Ari; Ilan G Ron; Fani Sperber; Noah Samuels; Jacob Shoham; Ofer Merimsky
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2011-06-28

8.  Attitudes of Arab and Jewish patients toward integration of complementary medicine in primary care clinics in Israel: a cross-cultural study.

Authors:  Eran Ben-Arye; Khaled Karkabi; Sonia Karkabi; Yael Keshet; Maria Haddad; Moshe Frenkel
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2008-11-05       Impact factor: 4.634

9.  Potential risks associated with traditional herbal medicine use in cancer care: A study of Middle Eastern oncology health care professionals.

Authors:  Eran Ben-Arye; Noah Samuels; Lee Hilary Goldstein; Kamer Mutafoglu; Suha Omran; Elad Schiff; Haris Charalambous; Tahani Dweikat; Ibtisam Ghrayeb; Gil Bar-Sela; Ibrahim Turker; Azza Hassan; Esmat Hassan; Bashar Saad; Omar Nimri; Rejin Kebudi; Michael Silbermann
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2015-11-24       Impact factor: 6.860

Review 10.  Noncommunicable diseases among urban refugees and asylum-seekers in developing countries: a neglected health care need.

Authors:  Ahmed Hassan Amara; Syed Mohamed Aljunid
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2014-04-03       Impact factor: 4.185

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  2 in total

1.  Effects of a patient-tailored integrative oncology intervention in the relief of pain in palliative and supportive cancer care.

Authors:  Eran Ben-Arye; Dana Elly; Noah Samuels; Orit Gressel; Katerina Shulman; Elad Schiff; Ofer Lavie; Amir Minerbi
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2021-01-12       Impact factor: 4.553

2.  From the "what" to the "how": Teaching integrative medicine-related skills to medical students during COVID-19.

Authors:  Noah Samuels; Dorith Shaham; Elad Schiff; Dina Ben-Yehuda; Adi Finkelstein; Lior Lesser; Michael Bergel; Shmuel Reis; Eran Ben-Arye
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2021-10-23
  2 in total

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