| Literature DB >> 31319819 |
Michael Au1, Athire Debbie Anandakumar2, Robyn Preston2,3, Robin A Ray2, Meg Davis4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Refugees have significant unmet health needs. Delivering services to refugees continues to be problematic in the Australian healthcare system. A systematic review and thematic synthesis of the literature exploring refugee perceptions of the Australian healthcare system was performed.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Autonomy; Cultural competency; Engagement; Health information; Health services; Perception; Power; Public health; Qualitative; Refugees; Trust
Year: 2019 PMID: 31319819 PMCID: PMC6637597 DOI: 10.1186/s12914-019-0206-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Int Health Hum Rights ISSN: 1472-698X
Fig. 1Adapted PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram
Table of Results. Number of refugees marked witha indicate that it is a mixed population
| Study | Study Design | Aim | Study setting | Service Explored | Study Methods | Number of Refugees | Country of Origin or Background | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bellamy et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | African refugees’ experiences of barriers in accessing pharmacy services in Brisbane. | Brisbane, Queensland | Pharmacy services | Focus groups | 16 | Somalia (5) Congo (5) South Sudan (2) Uganda (1) Burundi (1) Liberia (1) Eritrea (1) | When describing their experiences in accessing pharmacy services, refugees noted four overarching themes: health system differences, navigating the Australian health system, communication barriers and health care-seeking behaviour. |
| Carolan et al. 2010[ | Qualitative | Experiences of African-born pregnant women receiving antenatal care in Melbourne. | Melbourne’s western suburbs | Maternity services | In-depth interviews | 18 | Ethiopia (1) Sudan (12) Eritrea (2) Somalia (2) Kenya (1) | Five themes that African refugee women giving birth encounter: pregnancy is not special; resettlement is a priority; childbearing is a normal process; coming to value continuous pregnancy care; and cultural sensitivity is important. |
| Cheng et al. 2015[ | Qualitative | Factors influencing Afghan refugees’ access at a single general practice in south-east Melbourne in 2013. | City of Greater Dandenong and City of Casey, Victoria | Primary care | Semi-structured interviews and field observation | 6 | Afghanistan (6) | Barriers to healthcare for newly arrived refugees include language and cultural responsiveness, appointments, difficulties with transport to the practice, long wait times and the cost of care. |
| Clark et al. 2014[ | Qualitative | Barriers to accessing primary health care services and exploration of medicine-related issues as experienced by refugee women in South Australia. | South Australia | Using health services and medicines while living in Australia | Focus groups | 38 | Sudan, Burundi, Congo (15) Burma (10) Afghanistan (5) Bhutan (8) | Patients found that language barriers were the main barrier to accessing primary health care. Interpreters were used inconsistently, and patients noted poor literacy. |
| Correa-Velez et al. 2012[ | Mixed methods | Developing a model of refugee maternity healthcare for from consultations with stakeholders, chart audit and surveys with health service providers and refugees. | Mater Mothers’ Hospital, Queensland | Maternity services | Chart audit and surveys (separate surveys with hospital staff) | 23 | Sudan (14) Burundi (5) Ethiopia (2) Congo (1) Somalia (1) | Participants stated the need for interpreters, education programs for pregnant women, and continuity of care. |
| Henderson et al. 2011[ | Qualitative | Access and use of health services by four CALD communities in Logan, Queensland. | Logan, Queensland | All services | Focus groups | 42a | Sudan, Afghanistan, Pacific Islands and Myanmar | Unfamiliarity with health services, difficulties accessing care were experienced by CALD communities. CALD communities valued traditional medical practices and wanted health practitioners to respect this. Language barriers and interpreter issues prominent. |
| Kay et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Barriers and facilitators of quality use of medicines for from primary healthcare providers and refugee health leaders in Brisbane. | Brisbane, Queensland | Pharmacy services | Semi-structured interviews | 3 | Sudan (1) Myanmar (1) Liberia (1) | Five barriers were identified between HCWs and refugee health leaders: communication and language constraints, cultural issues, limited health literacy, financial cost, and health system concerns. |
| Liamputtong et al. 2006[ | Qualitative | Experience of caesarean birth among Cambodian, Lao and Vietnamese women. | Melbourne, Victoria | Maternity services | In-depth interviews | 91a | Laos (30) Vietnam (30) Cambodia (31) | Women’s experiences in caesarean birth have three main themes: trust in medical knowledge, expectations and communication with an understanding of their caregivers’ preferences. |
| McBride et al. 2016[ | Mixed methods | Evaluation of the Refugee Health Nurse Liaison role at Dandenong Hospital. | Dandenong Hospital, Victoria | Refugee Health Nurse Liaison | Semi-structured surveys (60) and chart audits (journals were only used with service providers) | 60 | Afghanistan (30) Sri Lanka (12) Iran (6) Burma (2) Iraq (2) Sudan (1) Pakistan (3) Other (2) | Patients noted that Refugee Health Nurse Liaisons were helpful in interpreting and providing helpful information. |
| McBride et al. 2017[ | Mixed Methods | Experiences of refugees in using Monash Health Refugee Health and Wellbeing services. | South-East Region of Melbourne | All services | Semi-structured interviews (18) and surveys (159) | 177 | Afghanistan (77) Sri Lanka (43) Iran (11) Myanmar (16) Iraq (3) Pakistan (14) Bangladesh (7) Other (6) | Refugees were highly satisfied with the service emphasising the importance of a trusting relationship with staff, access to bicultural support workers, onsite interpreting and integrated care. |
| McCann et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Help-seeking barriers and facilitators of mental health and substance use services in recently arrived young Sub-Saharan African migrants in Melbourne. | Melbourne, Victoria | Mental health and substance use services | In-depth interviews (28) and focus groups (41) | 69a | Sub-Saharan Africa | Participants noted four help-seeking barriers that prevented them from seeking help for mental health and alcohol and drug use: stigma of mental illness, lack of mental health literacy in parents and young people, perceived lack of cultural competency of formal help sources, and financial costs deterring access. |
| Murray et al. 2010[ | Qualitative | Birth experiences of African refugee women in Brisbane. | Brisbane, Queensland | Maternity services | Semi-structured interviews | 10 | Sudan (5) Liberia (1) Ethiopia (2) Somalia (2) | Refugee birthing experiences faced some unique challenges such as language barriers, the refugee experience, female genital mutilation, and healthcare staff with little cultural competence. |
| Neale et al. 2007[ | Mixed Methods | Health service use and barriers of recently arrived immigrants from the Horn of Africa in Melbourne. | Melbourne, Victoria | All services | Semi-structured questionnaires | 126a | Somalia (67) Eritrea (29) Ethiopia (24) Sudan (6) | Difficulties with language, including the availability of interpreters, were identified as the main barriers to accessing appropriate health services. Half reported difficulties with accessing services. |
| Nicol et al. 2014[ | Qualitative | Refugee experience, access and understanding relating to early oral health. | Western Australia | Child dental health services | Focus groups (interviews were only with service providers) | 39 | Burma (16) Iraq, Kuwait (9) Sudan (5) Afghanistan (3) Burundi (2) Congo (2) Rwanda (1) Nigeria (1) | Many participants felt overwhelmed due to misinformation and low health literacy. Themes involved included parents’ past experience, resettlement issues, and enablers and barriers to accessing dental services. |
| Niner et al. 2013[ | Qualitative | Experiences of pregnancy and birth before and after resettlement for Karen women in Australia. | Not specified | Maternity services | Interviews | 15 | Myanmar (15) | Many patients used self-reliance when emotionally distressed. They were unsettled by the medicalisation of birthing and reaction to health service varied from gratitude to feelings of discrimination. |
| O’Callaghan et al. 2007[ | Qualitative | Experiences of older Vietnamese women in using medications in Fairfield, NSW. | Fairfield, New South Wales | Primary care | Semi-structured interviews (20) and focus groups (20) | 40 | Vietnam (40) | Women’s health literacy influence medication use and their rationale. Refugees have concerns about health professionals not favouring traditional medicine use. |
| Omeri, A et al. 2006[ | Qualitative | Beliefs, practices and experiences of Afghan people in accessing healthcare in New South Wales. | New South Wales (most likely Sydney) | All services | Semi-structured interviews and focus groups | 38 | Afghanistan (38) | Four main themes emerge from Afghan refugee experiences of accessing healthcare: emotional responses to trauma and migration, culture specific health maintenance strategies, cultural views on mental health, barriers impeding accessibility and cultural factors influencing outcomes. |
| Owens et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Refugee and migrant women’s perceptions of using antenatal healthcare services in Perth. | Perth, Western Australia | Community-based maternity services | Semi-structured interviews | 12a | Indonesia (1) Pakistan (1) Vietnam (1) Iran (1) Sudan (1) Myanmar (6) Thailand (1) | Women noted lack of social support during pregnancy, language difficulties, and cultural differences. They were happy with the completeness of care throughout pregnancy. |
| Phillips 2013[ | Qualitative | Readily accessible remote telephone interpreting in the resettlement experience of refugees. | Not specified | Remote translation and interpreting services | Chart audit (265) and interviews (8) | 273 | Afghanistan, Bosnia, Burma, Iran, Iraq, Sierra Leone, Sudan | Remote interpreters do not provide the same care and attention as an on-site interpreter. Longer conversations, more interruptions, can occur with remote interpreters. |
| Riggs et al. 2012[ | Qualitative | To explore the utilisation and experience of maternal and child health services in Melbourne for parents of refugee background from the perspective of users and providers. | Wyndham and Hume in Melbourne, Victoria | Maternal and child health services | Focus groups (interviews were only with service providers) | 87 | Karen, Iraqi, Assyrian Chaldean, Lebanese, South Sudanese, Bhutanese | Barriers for patients included access to transport, lack of confidence in speaking English. Continuity of care was appreciated and preferred. 4 identified themes included facilitating access to maternal and child health services, promoting continued engagement with the MCH service, language challenges, and what is working well and could be done better. |
| Riggs et al. 2016 [ | Qualitative | Experiences of barriers, knowledge and surrounding beliefs of maternal oral health from refugees and service providers. | South-East region of Melbourne | Maternal dental health services | Focus groups (interviews were only with service providers) | 27 | Afghanistan (14) Sri-Lanka (13) | Afghan men provided transport, translation and their role in caring for their wives challenged traditional preconceptions. Afghan men would like health professionals to enquire about their health concerns. |
| Riggs et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Experiences of Karen women in group pregnancy care in Melbourne. | Melbourne, Victoria | Maternity services | Focus groups | 19 | Karen (19) | Women felt empowered and reassured when learning about pregnancy, sharing stories and developing trusting relationships in a group setting. Communication and privacy were issues encountered in the hospital. |
| Riggs, Yelland, Szwarc et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | The experiences of Afghan women and men of refugee background having a baby in Melbourne, Australia. | Greater Dandenong and Casey in Melbourne | Maternal and child health services | Interviews (focus groups were only with service providers) | 30 | Afghanistan (30) | Afghan men found their role as a father changed in Australia but were generally pleased with the changes. Men appreciated when health professionals took an interest in them and would prefer if HCWs were responsive to issues surrounding settlement in a new country. |
| Robards et al. 2019 [ | Qualitative | Understanding health system navigation and the role of technology for young people belonging to one or more marginalised groups. | New South Wales | All services | Semi-structured interviews | 9a | Marginalised young people are ambivalent about their healthcare journey. For refugees, confidentiality concerns, discrimination and confusion over the complexity of the health system were commonly encountered themes. | |
| Russo et al. 2015[ | Qualitative | Emotional and social wellbeing of new mothers from Afghanistan living in Melbourne. | City of Greater Dandenong and City of Casey, Victoria | Maternal and child health services | Focus groups (28) and in-depth interviews (10) | 38 | Afghanistan (38) | The majority of patients reported positive experiences with HCWs and the health system They felt respected and included in the decisions regarding their care. Some discussed how their care conflicted with traditional cultural practices. Emotional challenges and changes to improve emotional wellbeing were also identified. |
| Samuel et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Narratives of health-seeking behaviours of Sri-Lankan Tamil refugees in Melbourne. | Melbourne, Victoria | All services | Semi-structured interviews | 12 | Sri Lankan (12) | Tamil refugees describe their health-seeking influenced by the search for the ‘good life’ that was lost or never experienced, seeking help from familiar channels in an unfamiliar context, and the desire for financial and occupational independence. |
| Sheikh et al. 2011[ | Mixed methods | Identifying issues affecting newly arrived refugees in accessing an emergency department. | Liverpool Hospital, New South Wales | Emergency department | Semi-structured questionnaires | 155 | Africa (106) Middle East (49) | Newly arrived refugees were aware of how to call for emergency medical help, but a large proportion noted they were fearful to make phone calls due to security implications on the basis of previous experiences in their home country. |
| Sievert et al. 2018[ | Mixed methods | To characterise and identify health literacy of chronic hepatitis B and barriers accessing healthcare in at-risk migrant populations. | Monash Health liver and refugee clinics in Melbourne suburbs | Liver and refugee clinics | Surveys (14) and semi-structured interviews (19) | 33a | Afghanistan (11) Myanmar (8) South Sudan (14) | Refugees and asylum seekers living with chronic hepatitis B have competing social pressures which impact their prioritisation of health. Poor knowledge about disease, testing, services as well as language barriers and cultural differences encountered impacted accessibility of services. |
| Stapleton et al. 2013[ | Mixed methods | Women from refugee background’s experiences of antenatal healthcare at an Australian tertiary public hospital. | Not specified | Maternity services | Focus groups (18), surveys (42) and chart audit (190) | 250 | Africa, Middle East and other countries | Patients noted differences between their traditional birthing practices and Western practices. Continuity of care throughout antenatal period provided security and support to negotiate an unfamiliar setting. |
| Sypek et al. 2008[ | Qualitative | Impact of regional resettlement of refugees on rural health services and critical health infrastructure in four rural towns in NSW. | Four rural communities in New South Wales | Primary care | Interviews | 7 | East and West Africa Europe Middle East | Availability of appropriate primary health care services, language accessibility and mismatch in service delivery expectations were all concerns identified in health services and health infrastructure in rural NSW towns. |
| Valibhoy, Kaplan, et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Experiences of young people in using mental health services in Australia. | Mainly in Melbourne, but not specified | Mental health services | Semi-structured interviews | 16 | Iraq (5) Afghanistan (3) Iran (2) Sudan (1) Pakistan (1) Tanzania (1) Ethiopia (1) Côte d’Ivoire (1) DR Congo (1) | Young refugee users of mental health services describe their experiences under the themes of accessible and responsive services, cultural sensitivity, recognising the impact of psychosocial stress, appropriate treatment strategies and the therapeutic relationship. |
| Valibhoy, Szwarc, et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Description of barriers young people face in accessing mental health services in Australia. | Mainly in Melbourne, but not specified | Mental health services | Semi-structured interviews | 16 | Iraq (5) Afghanistan (3) Iran (2) Sudan (1) Pakistan (1) Tanzania (1) Ethiopia (1) Côte d’Ivoire (1) DR Congo (1) | Refugees face unfamiliarity with existence of services or thresholds needed to enter a service and stigma. Refugee youth more likely to turn to informal help than professional help. Negative expectations about seeking help, need for autonomy and structural barriers faced by refugees. |
| Wohler et al. 2017[ | Systematic review | Systematic review into barriers culturally and linguistically diverse women face in accessing mental health services in Australia. | Mental health services | When accessing mental health services in Australia, culturally and linguistically diverse women (including refugees) face language and communication barriers, logistical barriers, barriers of cultural dissonance and have a preference for alternative interventions. | ||||
| Yelland et al. 2014[ | Qualitative | Responsiveness of health services to the social and mental health of Afghan women and men at the time of having a baby. | City of Greater Dandenong and City of Casey, Victoria | Maternal and child health services | Semi-structured interviews (focus groups were only with service providers) | 30 | Afghanistan (30) | Participants stated they were not asked about social circumstances despite social hardship during the antenatal and postnatal period. |
| Yelland et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Afghan refugee and service providers’ experiences of language support during pregnancy check-ups, labour and birth. | Victoria | Maternity services | Interviews (focus groups were only with service providers) | 30 | Afghanistan (30) | There was a lack of use of interpreters with family members often interpreting. |
Appraisal of Qualitative Articles using the Modified Critical Appraisal Tool (MCAT). Theoretical appraisal was omitted from assessment as only 8 articles clearly stated their methodology and paradigm [20, 35, 38, 39, 42, 45, 50, 59].
| Study | Design | Fundamentals | Credibility | Dependability | Reporting | Utility | Overall Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robards et al. 2019 [ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Low utility | High quality |
| Bellamy et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Moderate utility | High quality |
| Owens et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Moderate utility | High quality |
| McCann et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Satisfied | Mild utility | High quality |
| Russo et al. 2015[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Satisfied | Mild utility | High quality |
| Murray et al. 2010[ | Qualitative | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Satisfied | Satisfied | Moderate utility | High quality |
| Liamputtong et al. 2006[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Low utility | High quality |
| Samuel et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Moderate utility | Acceptable quality |
| McBride et al. 2017[ | Mixed Methods | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Mild utility | Acceptable quality |
| Yelland et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Low utility | Acceptable quality |
| Cheng et al. 2015[ | Qualitative | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Mild utility | Acceptable quality |
| Nicol et al. 2014[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservation | Satisfied with reservations | Moderate utility | Acceptable quality |
| Riggs et al. 2012[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Moderate utility | Acceptable quality |
| Carolan et al. 2010[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Severe Limitations | Satisfied | Moderate utility | Acceptable quality |
| O’Callaghan et al. 2007[ | Qualitative | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Mild utility | Acceptable quality |
| Omeri, A et al. 2006[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied | Limitations | Mild utility | Acceptable quality |
| Sievert et al. 2018[ | Mixed Methods | Satisfied | Limitations | Limitations | Limitations | Moderate utility | Low quality |
| Valibhoy, Szwarc, et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Severe Limitations | Severe Limitations | Limitations | Moderate utility | Low quality |
| Valibhoy, Kaplan, et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Severe Limitations | Severe Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Moderate utility | Low quality |
| Riggs et al. 2017[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Limitations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Riggs et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Moderate utility | Low quality |
| Riggs, Yelland, Szwarc et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| McBride et al. 2016[ | Mixed methods | Satisfied | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Moderate utility | Low quality |
| Kay et al. 2016[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Severe Limitations | Limitations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Yelland et al. 2014[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Clark et al. 2014[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Severe Limitations | Limitations | High utility | Low quality |
| Stapleton et al. 2013[ | Mixed methods | Satisfied | Limitations | Satisfied | Limitations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Phillips et al. 2013[ | Qualitative | Limitations | Severe Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Severe Limitations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Niner et al. 2013[ | Qualitative | Limitations | Severe Limitations | Severe Limitations | Limitations | Moderate utility | Low quality |
| Correa-Velez et al. 2012[ | Mixed methods | Satisfied | Limitations | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Sheikh et al. 2011[ | Mixed methods | Limitations | Severe Limitations | Severe Limitations | Limitations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Henderson et al. 2011[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Satisfied with reservations | Mild utility | Low quality |
| Sypek et al. 2008[ | Qualitative | Satisfied | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Severe Limitations | High utility | Low quality |
| Neale et al. 2007[ | Mixed Methods | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Satisfied with reservations | Limitations | Low utility | Low quality |
Quantitative and Mixed Methods Appraisals
| Study | Study Design | Tool Used | MCAT Appraisal | Final Appraisal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| McBride et al. 2017[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Acceptable quality | Acceptable quality |
| Sievert et al. 2018[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Low quality | Low quality |
| Wohler et al. 2017[ | Systematic review | JBI | Not applicable | Low quality |
| Neale et al. 2007[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Low quality | Low quality |
| McBride et al. 2016[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Low quality | Low quality |
| Stapleton et al. 2013[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Low quality | Low quality |
| Correa-Velez et al. 2012[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Low quality | Low quality |
| Sheikh et al. 2011[ | Mixed Methods | MMAT | Low quality | Low quality |
Fig. 2Explanatory Model for the Experiences of Refugees in Using Healthcare Services in Australia
GRADE-CERQual Evidence Profile (EP)
| Summary of Review Finding | Studies contributing to the review finding | Methodological Limitations | Coherence | Adequacy | Relevance | CERQual Assessment of Confidence in the Evidence | Explanation of CERQual Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Refugees are in an unfamiliar environment, manifested by differences in culture, differences in language, and differences in health systems | [ | Moderate concerns: A total of 6 articles were of high quality, 8 articles were of acceptable quality, and 19 articles were of low quality. | Minor concerns: data reasonably consistent across studies, with some minor deviations | No or very minor concerns: explanatory finding: very high data quantity and richness | No or very minor concerns | High confidence: It is highly likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest | Although there were moderate concerns over the methodology of some low-quality articles, we have high confidence that the coherence, adequacy and relevance of the data represents the phenomenon well. |
| 2. Information sharing promotes power and autonomy and is important to help refugees navigate a complex health system. A lack of information sharing results in disempowerment and loss in autonomy. | [ | Moderate concerns: A total of 5 articles were high quality, 4 articles were acceptable quality, and 12 articles were low quality. | Minor concerns: data reasonably consistent across studies, with some minor deviations | No or very minor concerns: explanatory finding: very high data quantity and richness | No or very minor concerns | High confidence: It is highly likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest | Although there were moderate concerns over the methodology of some low-quality articles, we have high confidence that the coherence, adequacy and relevance of the data represents the phenomenon well. |
| 3. Refugees reclaim power and autonomy through familiar means. At times, they may be successful, but this may perpetuate their unfamiliarity with the health system | [ | Moderate concerns: A total of 6 articles were high quality, 6 articles were acceptable quality, and 17 articles were low quality. | Minor concerns: data reasonably consistent across studies, with some minor deviations | No or very minor concerns: explanatory finding: very high data quantity and richness | No or very minor concerns | High confidence: It is highly likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest | Although there were moderate concerns over the methodology of some low-quality articles, we have high confidence that the coherence, adequacy and relevance of the data represents the phenomenon well. |
| 4. Refugees face barriers and enablers in accessing health services which are related to the acceptability, accommodation, accessibility, affordability, and the availability of health services | [ | Moderate concerns: A total of 6 articles were high quality, 8 articles were acceptable quality, and 17 articles were low quality. | Minor concerns: data reasonably consistent across studies, with some minor deviations | No or very minor concern: descriptive finding, high quantity in data | No or very minor concerns | High confidence: It is highly likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest | Although there were moderate concerns over the methodology of some low-quality articles, we have high confidence that the coherence, adequacy and relevance of the data represents the phenomenon well. |
| 5. Trust and privacy influence all aspects of access and engagement | [ | Moderate concerns: A total of 4 articles were high quality, 4 articles were acceptable quality, and 10 articles were low quality. | Minor concerns: data reasonably consistent across studies, with some minor deviations | Moderate concerns: descriptive finding: data quantity not sound, but considerably rich | No or very minor concerns | Moderate confidence: It is likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest | There were moderate concerns over methodology of articles and the adequacy of the data. |