| Literature DB >> 29450104 |
Kim S Griswold1, Kevin Pottie2,3,4, Isok Kim5, Wooksoo Kim5, Li Lin6.
Abstract
Refugee populations have unequal access to primary care and may not receive appropriate health screening or preventive service recommendations. They encounter numerous health care disadvantages as a consequence of low-income status, race and ethnicity, lower educational achievement, varying degrees of health literacy, and limited English proficiency. Refugees may not initially embrace the concept of preventive care, as these services may have been unavailable in their countries of origin, or may not be congruent with their beliefs on health care. Effective interventions in primary care include the appropriate use of culturally and linguistically trained interpreters for health care visits and use of evidence-based guidelines. Effective approaches for the delivery of preventive health and wellness services require community engagement and collaborations between public health and primary care. In order to provide optimal preventive and longitudinal screening services for refugees, policies and practice should be guided by unimpeded access to robust primary care systems. These systems should implement evidence-based guidelines, comprehensive health coverage, and evaluation of process and preventive care outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Health care disparities; Health insurance; Preventive care; Primary care; Public health; Refugees; Screening
Year: 2018 PMID: 29450104 PMCID: PMC5809847 DOI: 10.1186/s40985-018-0082-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Rev ISSN: 0301-0422
Integrating public health and primary care
| Tailor the promotion and delivery of various preventive and screening measures to specific refugee populations. | |
| Integrate data systems to improve estimates of health services and health outcomes. | |
| Utilize social determinants of health for local and regional guidelines. | |
| Enhance training of epidemiologists in policy delivery and immigrant community engagement and enhance public health and primary care collaborations. | |
| Based on Bocanegra, et al. [ |
Preventive care resources for practitioners caring for refugees
| *U.S. Centers for Disease Control | |
| *Office of Refugee Resettlement, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services | |
| *Canadian Collaboration for Immigrant and Refugee Health | |
| *Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases and Refugee Health Network of Australia |