| Literature DB >> 33778914 |
Vanessa Place1, Benjamin Nabb1, Karima Viksten Assel1,2, Sofie Bäärnhielm1,2, Christina Dalman1,3, Anna-Clara Hollander4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite availability of effective treatments, migrants in high-income countries seek care for conditions associated with stigma to a lower extent than the rest of the population. We conducted a scoping review to map the literature on interventions to increase migrants' care-seeking behaviour in high-income countries for stigmatised conditions. Main body of the abstract: We searched 15 electronic databases and journals, hand-searched references and citations, to identify studies on interventions to increase migrants' care-seeking in high-income countries for stigmatised conditions. We applied language restrictions for English and Swedish, and searched the full time period up to 5 July 2019. Our primary outcome of interest was care utilisation.Entities:
Keywords: Care-seeking; HIV; Hepatitis; High-income countries; Interventions to increase care-seeking behaviour; Mental health; Migrants; Scoping review; Stigma; TB
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33778914 PMCID: PMC8192321 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-021-02065-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.328
Key characteristics of included studies (n = 16)
| Intervention approach | Author(s), publication year, location | Stigmatised condition | Study population | Study design | Intervention description | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Health Communication | ||||||
Hernandez & Organista, 2013 USA1 | Mental health (depression) | Latina migrants; 79·0% born in Mexico | Two-group pre/post-test randomised controlled trial | Marginally statistically significant difference (p = 0·012) in the mean increase in intent to seek treatment for depression between the intervention and control group, pre- to post-intervention | ||
Unger et al., 2013 USA2 | Mental health (depression) | Hispanics (84·0% migrants) | Longitudinal randomised controlled trial | The intervention group were exposed to the fotonovela | No statistically significant difference in willingness to seek help for depression pre- to post-intervention or at one-month follow up, in the intervention or control group. The difference between the two groups was also not significant | |
López et al., 2009 USA3 | Mental health (psychosis) | Spanish-speaking Latinxs (86·0% migrants) | One-group pre/post-test | Amongst community residents there was a statistically significant ( | ||
Casas et al., 2014 USA4 | Mental health (psychosis) | Spanish-speakers(86·0% migrants) | One-group pre/post-test | Statistically significant ( | ||
Heilemann et al., 2017 USA5 | Mental health (depression and anxiety) | Latinas | One-group pre/post-test | 39·0% and 28·5% of participants reported using the online resources within one and six weeks of intervention exposure, respectively. Participants' level of perceived confidence in their ability to seek help was significantly associated with intention/action to seek help at one ( | ||
Chao et al., 2007 USA6 | HBV and liver cancer | Asian-Americans(94·0% migrants) | One-group practice-based study | One-day clinic with free HBV screening and physician-led educational seminars in English and Mandarin. Participants received their test results, alongside a detailed interpretation letter and specific recommendations for follow-up health actions, four weeks later | At one-year follow-up, 67·0% of participants who had screened positive for chronic HBV infection reported that they had followed recommendations to seek liver cancer screening from a physician | |
Teng & Friedman, 2009 USA7 | Mental health | Chinese-Americans | One-group pre/post-test | Statistically significant increase ( | ||
Tran et al., 2014 USA8 | Mental health (depression and stress) | Latina migrants; 65·0% Mexican | One-group pre/post-test | ALMA ( | Statistically significant ( | |
Dueweke & Bridges, 2016 USA9 | Mental health (suicide) | Latinx migrants; 85·0% Mexican | Two-group pre/post-test randomised controlled trial | The intervention group were exposed to a National Institute of Mental Health brochure on suicide, available in English and Spanish. It included prevalence statistics, risk factors, prevention methods, and crisis help lines. The control group were exposed to an information brochure about walking | No significant difference ( | |
Piwowarczyk et al., 2013 USA10 | Mental health (trauma) | Congolese and Somali migrants | One-group pre/post-test | The UJAMBO program: one-session group workshops centred around a DVD that uses African women’s stories to convey information about mammographies, pap smears, and trauma. 4–12 participants per group | Statistically significant increase in participants’ knowledge of available mental health services ( | |
| Support groups | Weine et al., 2008 USA11 | Mental health (PTSD) | Bosnian-Herzegovinian refugees | Longitudinal randomised controlled trial | CAFES ( | On average, individuals in the intervention group attended more mental health visits in the 18 months post-intervention ( |
Weine et al., 2003 USA12 | Mental health (trauma) | Kosovar refugees | Two-group quasi-experimental | TAFES ( | Statistically significant increase in engagers´ (family members who attended at least one session) use of psychiatric services from baseline to three-month follow-up ( | |
| Primary care | Ahmad et al., 2012 Canada13 | Psychosocial health | Afghan refugees | Randomised controlled trial | The intervention group were exposed to the CaPRA ( | In an exit survey, intention to visit a psychosocial counsellor was higher in the intervention (72·0%) than in the control (46·0%) group, but this difference was not statistically significant ( |
Yeung et al., 2004 USA14 | Mental health | Asian-American migrants | One-group practice-based study | Four-component intervention to integrate psychiatry and primary care. It included: i) training of PCPs on treatment guidelines for common mental disorders; ii) training PCPs and nurses on cultural sensitivity; iii) a primary care nurse who acted as a”bridge” or care manager; and iv) a liaison psychiatrist providing on-site services | Statistically significant increase in the number of patients referred to mental health services ( | |
White et al., 2015 USA15 | Mental health (trauma) | Somali and Ethiopian refugees | One-group quasi-experimental retrospective | Five-component intervention at an urban primary care clinic to increase multi-problem patients’ engagement with treatment, including: i) integrated physical and mental health services; ii) trained interpreters and bicultural health workers; iii) a four-visit protocol to address physical and psychological complaints by primary care providers; iv) co-management of patients receiving physical and mental health services; and v) availability of trauma-informed psychotherapy | The intervention was associated with high levels of adherence to mental health referral (48·0%). Both therapy adherents (patients who engaged in psychotherapy) and non-engagers showed increased primary care utilisation pre– to post-intervention, but the difference between these groups was not statistically significant. No significant difference in both therapy adherents and non-adherents’ usage of emergency and urgent care, pre– to post-intervention | |
Ngo et al., 2009 USA16 | Mental health (depression) | 67·0% Latinx, 19·0% black, 14·0% white (55·0% second-generation migrants) | Multi-site randomised controlled trial | Multi-component, multi-site intervention to improve mental health care in primary care. It included: i) expert-led teams that adapted/implemented the intervention at each site; ii) care managers supporting primary care providers; iii) training for care managers in manualized CBT for depression; and iv) patient and provider choice of treatment modalities. The control group had access to care as usual | Statistically significant difference between intervention and control group in: use of psychotherapy/counselling amongst blacks ( | |
CBT Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, HBV Hepatitis B Virus, PCP Primary Care Physician, PTSD Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
Fig. 1Study selection