| Literature DB >> 32069309 |
Emily A Arnold1, Shannon M Fuller1, Omar Martinez2, Julia Lechuga3, Wayne T Steward1.
Abstract
Changes in the United States federal-level political landscape have been felt within immigrant communities, and the public health clinics that serve them. We sought to document how HIV prevention and care clinics are reaching and retaining their immigrant community patients during a period of retrenchment of accessible public resources and immigrant rights. From May 2018 through January 2019, we conducted 20 in-depth interviews with clinicians, case workers, advocates, legal experts, and peer navigators in Northern and Central California. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. Several themes emerged which can be grouped into three primary areas: changes post-election, challenges meeting the needs of patients, and best practices for maintaining access to prevention and care services. Post-election, providers reported some of their patients skipping clinic appointments due to fear of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids and deportation while other patients had moved to locations that they felt were less policed. Challenges emerged around linguistic competency, meeting basic needs such as housing stability and employment, and treating mental health sequelae resulting from trauma experienced in home countries or during migration itself. Best practices included hiring bi-lingual and bi-cultural staff, linking to legal services to assist with immigration status, holding trainings around immigrant rights and responses to ICE raids, and building trust with immigrant patients by assuring them that their status would not be collected or reported. In light of adverse policy changes affecting immigrants, agencies have begun to institute best practices to mitigate the negative impact of those policies on their clients and patients.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32069309 PMCID: PMC7028255 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0229291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of participants (N = 20).
| N (%) | |
|---|---|
| Case Manager, Social Worker, Navigator | 7 (35%) |
| Provider (MD, NP, PA) | 6 (30%) |
| Legal / policy expert | 5 (25%) |
| Clinic Administrator | 2 (10%) |
| Hispanic/Latino(a) | 12 (60%) |
| Non-Hispanic/Latino(a) | 8 (35%) |
| Asian | 4 (20%) |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 2 (10%) |
| Black / African American | 1 (5%) |
| Native Hawaiian / Pacific Islander | 1 (5%) |
| White | 6 (30%) |
| Other | 4 (20%) |
| Refuse to Answer | 2 (10%) |
Themes and representative narratives.
| Theme | Representative Quote |
|---|---|
| Following the election, through our medical-legal partnership, we heard that there was one doctor from [a large public hospital] who said that someone had refused emergency medical treatment because they were concerned that they wouldn't be able to pay it back and that would affect their immigration status. ( | |
| Housing for undocumented is just plain difficult. Because housing, everything, needs ID. And everything needs Social Security numbers. Everything needs that. So for the undocumented, housing is off. I can't find anything for undocumented clients. | |
| I guess I would stand back to say it's pretty baked into the mission and the culture of [our clinic] to be a welcoming space irrespective of somebody's immigration status. So, a very large portion of our patient population is undocumented…But I would say the whole registration process is a very judgment-free zone where people just acknowledge what their status is and then we just go about getting them whatever coverage we can…And then we do periodically, like at staff meetings, we've had most recently a presentation about how to talk with patients who are worried about ICE raids and what they're rights are. ( |