| Literature DB >> 31444614 |
Catharina F van der Boor1, Ross White2.
Abstract
This review brought together research investigating barriers asylum seekers and refugees (AS&R) face in accessing and negotiating mental health (MH) services. The candidacy framework (CF) was used as synthesizing argument to conceptualize barriers to services (Dixon-Woods et al. in BMC Med Res Methodol 6:35, 2006). Five databases were systematically searched. Twenty-three studies were included and analyzed using the CF. The seven stages of the framework were differentiated into two broader processes-access and negotiation of services. Comparatively more data was available on barriers to access than negotiation of services. The Identification of Candidacy (access) and Appearances at Services (negotiation) were the most widely discussed stages in terms of barriers to MH care. The stage that was least discussed was Adjudications (negotiation). The CF is useful to understand inter-related barriers to MH care experienced by AS&R. A holistic approach is needed to overcome these barriers together with further research investigating understudied areas of candidacy.Entities:
Keywords: Asylum seekers; Candidacy framework; Mental health services; Refugees
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31444614 PMCID: PMC6952341 DOI: 10.1007/s10903-019-00929-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immigr Minor Health ISSN: 1557-1912
The seven stages of candidacy [17]
| Stages of candidacy | Description of stages | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Identification of candidacy by the individual | Process through which individuals decide that they have a particular need and that assistance may be required | Individuals’ recognition of MH symptoms |
| 2. Navigation | Knowing how to make contact with appropriate services in relation to identified candidacy | Being allowed time off work for appointments |
| 3. Permeability of services | Ease with which people can use services. Includes the level of explicit and implicit gate-keeping within a service and the complexity of its referral systems; in addition, it refers to the ‘cultural alignment’ between users and services | Provision of translational services |
| 4. Appearing at services and asserting candidacy | The work that individuals must do to assert their candidacy in an interaction with a HC professional | The service user feels taken seriously’—‘acknowledged’ and/or ‘understood |
| 5. Adjudications by professional | Refers to the judgments and decisions made by professionals which allow or inhibit continued progression of candidacy | Being referred on to mental health services |
| 6. Offers of, and resistance to, specific services | Emphasizes that follow-up services may be appropriately or inappropriately offered and that these may or may not be acted upon by service-users | Refusal of offer of medication |
| 7. Operating conditions and local production of candidacy | Incorporates factors that influence decisions about subsequent service provision (i.e. the resources available for addressing candidacy) and the kinds of contingent relationships that develop between professionals and service-users over a number of encounters | Adapting the frequency of consultations to the individual’s needs |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the literature search
Summary characteristics of studies included in the review
| Study | Country study conducted | Participants | Recruitment | Type of migrant | Country of origin | Data collection | Qualitative analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahmed et al. (2008) [ | Canada | 10 Participants Age 20–40 Gender: female | Purposive sampling | Refugees and asylum seekers | China (2), India (2), Pakistan (1), South America (3), Egypt (1), and Haiti (1) | Semi-structured interviews | Constant comparative method |
| Ahmed et al. (2017) [ | Canada | 12 Participants Age 20–37 | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Syria | Focus groups | Thematic content analysis |
| Asgary & Segar (2011) [ | United States of America | 35 Participants Age > 40 years Gender: 30 male, 5 female | Purposive sampling | Asylum seekers | Cameroon (4), Chad (4), Guinea (4), Pakistan (3), Bangladesh (2), Congo (2), Kosovo (2), Senegal (2), Sierra Leone (2), Egypt (1), Eritrea (1), Ghana (1), India (1), Ivory Coast (1), Lebanon (1), Mali (1), Mauritania (1), Nepal (1), and Russia (1) | 21 semi-structured interviews 5 focus groups | Comprehensive analysis, not specified further |
| Behnia (2003) [ | Canada | 36 Participants Age 20–49 Gender: not specified | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Bosnia, Cambodia, El Salvador, Iran, and Somalia (numbers not specified) | Semi-structured interviews | Not specified |
| Campbell et al. (2014) [ | Canada | 21 participants Average age 45.62 Gender: female | Purposive sampling | Refugees, Refugee claimants and undocumented migrants | Mexico (4), El Salvador (2), Colombia (3), Venezuela (4), Ecuador (2), Cuba (1), Dominican Republic (2), Costa Rica (2), South America (1) | Semi-structured interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| Chase et al. (2017) [ | Canada | 25 participants Average age 36.7, minimum and maximum not provided Gender: 11 males, 13 females, one not specified | Purposive sampling | Asylum seekers | Sub-Saharan Africa (10), North Africa (3), the Middle East (3), South Asia (2), Southeast Asia (1), the Caribbean (5), and South America (1), individual countries not specified | Semi-structured interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| Djuretic et al. (2007) [ | United Kingdom | 19 participants Age 20–69 years Gender: 7 male, 12 female | Purposive sampling | Refugees, asylum seekers | Croatia (3), Bosnia and Herzegovina (9), Serbia and Montenegro (4), Kosovo (1), Macedonia (1), Slovenia (1) | Focus groups | Thematic content analysis |
| Donnelly et al. (2011) [ | Canada | 10 participants Age >18 years Gender: all female | Purposive sampling | Refugees | China (5), Sudan (5) | In-depth individual interviews | Framework analysis |
| Feldmann et al. (2007) [ | The Netherlands | 36 participants Age 18–66 Gender: 15 males, 21 females | Purposive sampling and snowball sampling | Refugees | Afghanistan (36) | Semi-structured interviews | Comparative analysis |
| Jensen et al. (2014) [ | Denmark | 5 participants1 Age 26–50 years Gender: 3 males, 2 females | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Iran (1), Bosnia and Herzegovina (1), Iraq (2), Turkey (1) | Interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| Kahn et al (2018) [ | Canada | 7 participants Age 22–40 | Purposive sampling | Forced migrants (legal status not specified) | Bahamas, Bangladesh, Iran, Lebanon, the Arabian Peninsula, and Ghana (numbers not specified). | In-depth interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| Leavey et al. (2007) [ | United Kingdom | 9 participants Age 19–41 years Gender: 8 males, 1 female | Purposive sampling | Refugees and asylum seekers | Turkey (8), Cyprus (1) | In-depth interviews | Narrative analysis |
| Maier & Straub (2011) [ | Switzerland | 13 participants Age 22–53 years Gender: 8 males, 5 females | Purposive sampling | Refugees and asylum seekers | Bosnia and Herzegovina (2), Kosovo (2),Turkey (Turkish) (1),Turkey (Kurdish) (1), Iran (Kurdish, (2), Afghanistan (2), Cameroon (1), Sudan (1), Chechnya (1) | Semi-structured interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| O’Mahony et al. (2012) [ | Canada | 30 participants Age not specified Gender: females | Not specified | Immigrant (not specified) and refugees | Not specified | In-depth critical ethnographic interviews and field notes | Critical ethnography |
| Omar et al. (2017) [ | Australia | 36 participants Age 18–60 Gender: males | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Somalia (17), Ethiopia (2), Djibouti (3), Eritrea (6), Saudi Arabia (5), Sudan (2), unknown (1) | Focus groups | Thematic content analysis |
| Palmer (2007) [ | United Kingdom | 10 participants Age >18 years Gender: 7 males, 3 females | Snowball sampling | Refugees | Ethiopia (10) | In-depth semi-structured interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| Palmer & Ward (2007) [ | United Kingdom | 21 participants Age 21–62 years Gender: 11 males, 10 females | Maximum variation sampling | Refugees and asylum seekers | Turkey (1), Bosnia and Herzegovina(1), Colombia (1), Democratic Republic of Congo (1), Ethiopia (3), Iran (3), Iraq (2), Kosovo (1), Russia (1), Rwanda (1), Somalia (5), Ukraine (1) | In-depth interviews | Thematic content analysis |
| Pavlish et al. (2010) [ | United States of America | 57 participants Age 18–80 Gender: females | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Somalia (57) | Focus groups | Inductive coding |
| Piwowarczyk et al. (2014) [ | United States of America | 48 participants Age 18–59 years Gender: all female | Convenience sample | Refugees and asylum seekers | Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia (numbers not specified) | Focus groups | Grounded theory |
| Shrestha-Ranjit et al. (2017) [ | New Zealand | 40 participantsa Age 18–82 Gender: 8 males, 32 females | Not specified | Refugees | Bhutan (40) | Focus groups | Thematic content analysis |
| Russo et al. (2015) [ | Australia | 38 participants Age > 18 years Gender: all female | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Afghanistan (38) | In-depth interviews and focus groups | Thematic content analysis |
| Teunissen et al. (2014) [ | The Netherlands | 15 participants Age 21–73 years Gender: 9 males, 6 females | Purposive sampling | Undocumented migrants | Burundi (1), Dominican Republic (1), Egypt (1), Eritrea (1), Ghana (1), Morocco (1), Nepal (1), Nigeria (1), Philippines (2), Sierra Leone (1), Somalia (1), Surinam (1), Uganda (1), Zambia (1) | Interviews | Grounded theory |
Valibhoy et al. (2017) [ | Australia | 16 participants Age 18–25 years Gender not specified | Purposive sampling | Refugees | Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Ivory Coast, Pakistan (Numbers not specified) | In-depth individual interviews | Thematic content analysis |
aOnly the answers of AS&R participants were included in this review
The stages of candidacy addressed by studies (N=23)
| Article | Stage 1 | Stage 2 | Stage 3 | Stage 4 | Stage 5 | Stage 6 | Stage 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahmed et al. (2008) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Ahmed et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Asgary and Segar (2011) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Behnia (2003) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Campbell et al. (2014) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Chase et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Djuretic et al. (2007) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Donnelly et al. (2011) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Feldmann et al. (2007) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Jensen et al. (2014) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Kahn et al. (2018) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Leavey et al. (2007) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Maier and Straub (2011) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| O’Mahony et al. (2012) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Omar et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Palmer (2007) [ | ✓ | ✓ | |||||
| Palmer and Ward (2007) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Pavlish et al. (2010) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Piwowarczyk et al. (2014) [ | ✓ | ✓ | |||||
| Shrestha-Ranjit et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Russo et al. (2015) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Teunissen et al. (2015) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Valibhoy et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Stage 1= Identification of candidacy, Stage 2= Navigation, Stage 3= Permeability of services, Stage 4= Appearing at services and asserting candidacy, Stage 5= Adjudication by professionals, Stage 6= Offers of and resistance to specific services and Stage 7= Operating conditions and local production of candidacy
Fig. 2Key thematic quotations