| Literature DB >> 35220955 |
Natasha Davidson1, Karin Hammarberg2, Lorena Romero3, Jane Fisher2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Globally, the number of forcibly displaced women is growing. Refugee and displaced women have poorer health outcomes compared to migrant and host country populations. Conflict, persecution, violence or natural disasters and under-resourced health systems in their country of origin contribute to displacement experiences of refugee and displaced women. Poor health outcomes are further exacerbated by the migration journey and challenging resettlement in host countries. Preventive sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of refugee and displaced women are poorly understood. The aim was to synthesise the evidence about access to preventive SRH care of refugee and displaced women.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Health care providers; Refugees; Sexual and reproductive health; Women
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35220955 PMCID: PMC8882295 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-12576-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing the process of study selection (adapted from [42])
Characteristics of qualitative studies and main findings
| Author, (Year); | Stated study objectives | Recruitment method; | Sample size; Classification; | Outcome measures | Data analysis | Main results; | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRH topic: Family planning (FP) | |||||||
| Morrison (2000) [ | Assess the need for contraception among women in Khao Phlu refugee camp and barriers to obtaining and using contraception | Walking through the camps women randomly asked to participate; Khao Phlu refugee camp, Thailand maternal and child health centre; in-depth individual interviews | refugees; 17–45 yrs. (mean 33); yrs. since arrival N/S | Contraceptive knowledge and beliefs about FP practices | N/S | Barriers to contraceptive use: • uncomfortable seeking contraception, • logistics - heavy rains during the monsoon season prevented travel to health centre, • facilities too far from their section in the camp, • providers’ unwillingness to prescribe contraception - women needed approval from their husbands, • importance placed on marriage and fidelity, Beliefs, cultural norms and misinformation pre-existing barriers for contraceptive use. Stress of refugee experiences may intensify these barriers. | .75 |
| Gurnah et al. (2011) [ | Exploring the reproductive health care experiences of a marginalized group: the Somali Bantu women in Hartford, Connecticut | Snowball sampling and networking; Hartford; 1 FGD | refugees; 22–45 yrs. (mean 34); yrs. since arrival mean 4.5 (2.5–5 yrs) | Reproductive health care needs, utilisation and beliefs | Thematic analysis using grounded theory | Barriers to care: • shyness discussing reproductive health with interpreters, • unwillingness to speak to a man about reproductive health problems, • Language Line interpreter did not understand the women, • cultural deference to authority figures - self-advocacy not accepted, • religious prohibitions on contraceptive use, • women chose to forgo care rather than discuss reproductive health topics with a male provider, • desired but limited scope for decision making. A lack of cultural fluency between women and providers. | .65 |
| Cherri et al. (2017) [ | Assess Syrian Refugee Women’s SRH care needs and behaviour and marriage perceptions, to improve services and their acceptability | Convenience sample, women attending clinic or living in informal tented settlements; Governorates of Lebanon- BML, South, North, Bekaa; 11 semi structured FGDs | refugees; 19–24 yrs. (22.2%) 25–35 yrs. (48.2%) 36–49 yrs. (19.4%); yrs. since arrival 1–6 | Perceptions and practices relating to marriage and contraceptive use | Thematic analysis | Perceptions and behaviours relating to contraceptive use: • cost a main barrier to contraceptive use with some women unaware of free services, • OCP (oral contraceptive pill) and intrauterine device most commonly used contraceptives, • rhythm and withdrawal methods perceived as the best and most harmless approaches to birth control, • excess bleeding, menstrual irregularities, back pain, and depression, anger, headache, loss of temper, anxiety, hypertension, and hormonal irregularities were perceived side effects of contraception, • husband’s refusal and family’s interference prevented women from using a contraceptive. • religion was not a barrier to use. Conflict partially changes behaviour and perceptions around contraceptive use. | .70 |
| Kabakkian-Khasholian et al. (2017) [ | Explore the perspectives on fertility behaviour and service utilisation of refugee Syrian women and service providers in Al-Marj town in West Bekaa, Lebanon. | Purposive sampling; Al-Marj in West Bekaa; 12 FGDs | refugees but not officially recognised in Lebanon; 18–45 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | Contraceptive use, decision-making regarding number of children before/after displacement and experiences with health services. | Thematic analysis | Contraceptive decision making: • awareness of dominant role of the male partner in the fertility and FP decision-making, • new roles emerged as a result of displacement. Perceptions about contraceptive needs and provision; • discriminatory treatment received at health facilities, • lack of women providers, • high cost. | .95 |
| Tanabe et al. (2017) [ | Examine the barriers and challenges at the community and health facility levels that hinder uptake of contraceptives | Purposively selected; Camps, settlements and urban areas in 6 host countries; 12 FGDs and in-depth interviews | refugees; 20–49 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | Attitudes towards and barriers to contraceptive uptake | N/S | FP services accessibility and barriers to use: • distant service delivery points, • cost of transport to access services, • lack of knowledge about different types of methods, especially emergency contraception, • misinformation and misconceptions, • religious, cultural and language barriers and social stigma, • opposition from husbands, • provider biases - discrimination against refugees, Quality of available services impacted willingness to obtain contraceptives: • lack of adherence to standard precautions, • lack of cleanliness, • long wait times, • limited privacy and confidentiality, Need to scale up FP services in acute emergency and protracted crises humanitarian settings. | .60 |
| West et al. (2017) [ | Explore factors that facilitate or limit use of FP services in a Syrian refugee camp in Jordan | Snowball technique; refugee camp in Jordan participants’ tents or caravans; semi structured interviews | refugees; 18–43 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | Awareness of FP methods, use of FP methods, access to services, service quality, barriers to use, potential improvements. | Frame-work analysis | Awareness of FP methods and services: • knowledge of general health services but poor awareness about FP services limited access to contraceptives. Utilisation and accessibility of FP services: • FP counselling or contraceptive services rarely used, • traditional cultural attitudes towards fertility limited young participants’ uptake of FP, • staff and health services overburdened. Quality of services: • staff conduct seen as inappropriate, • women wanted examinations and consults to be more respectful. | .70 |
Agbemenu et al. (2018) [ HC USA; CO Somalia | Explore the reproductive health decision-making, FP and care during pregnancy and childbirth of Somali Bantu women in Buffalo | Convenience sample via snowball technique; Somali Bantu Community Organization office; 5 semi-structured FGDs | refugees; 18–35 yrs. (40%) 36–55 (47%) 55+ (10%); yrs. since arrival < 10, (20%) 10–19, (73%) 20+, (3%) | FP decision-making and source of reproductive health education | Content analysis | Barriers to care: • husbands’ resistant to birth control, • husbands have final decision on contraceptive use, • cultural taboo against saying no more children, • natural methods are preferred (e.g. breast feeding) compared with OCPs, • OCPs undesirable due to side effects e.g. consequent inability to get pregnant leading to separation and divorce. Knowledge about reproductive health modalities despite low literacy and limited education. | .85 |
| Ghebreyesus et al. (2020) [ | Gain a deeper understanding of structural barriers to contraceptive care seeking by Eritrean asylum seekers in Israel | Convenience and snowball sampling; Israeli non-government organisation health facility; 4 FGDs and in-depth interviews | asylum seekers; 21–30 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | Knowledge of FP and contraception methods, barriers to contraceptive care seeking and vulnerability to unwanted pregnancies | Open, focused and axial coding | Barriers to contraceptive use: • distance to health facilities, • traveling hours by public transport is challenging, • inability to communicate. Limited healthcare resources: • limited time available per patient, • contraceptive product shortages, • navigating a fragmented and complex health system particularly challenging for contraceptive care, • Ministry of Health sites not offering FP services Cost of contraceptive services: • Eritreans excluded from public health insurance, • precarious low-wage employment makes contraceptive care prohibitive, Low standard of care in private clinics: • private gynaecologists offered services but provided incorrect information and prescriptions and did not examine patients prior to administering contraceptives, • women felt discriminated against by providers. | .90 |
Royer et al. (2020) [ HC USA; CO Somalia, Congo. | Evaluate FP knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) among refugee women post-resettlement to the USA | Snowball sampling; community centres; 6 FGDs | refugees; 18–68 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | KAPs regarding reproductive health concerns, access and barriers to care, FP conceptualisation and contraceptive method acceptability | Modified grounded theory | FP KAP: • perceived community preference for many children due to high rates of infant and child mortality, • lack of resources and personal isolation [in USA] changed fertility desires and desired number of children, • FP used to delay first child, birth spacing, birth limiting but depended on method acceptability, partner/family influence, • breastfeeding preferred method of FP as religion permits, • contraception for birth spacing accepted religious practice. Prior to resettlement, men made the final decision about FP but post-resettlement some women reported more equal relationships. Refugee manifestations of FP KAP involve a balance between retention of native culture and incorporation of host country norms. | .85 |
| Zhang et al. (2020) [ | Exploration of Somali refugee women’s knowledge, attitudes, and experiences with FP and contraception in the USA. Identify barriers and facilitators to contraceptive use | Purposive snowball sampling; King County community centres, participants’ homes; semi structured FGDs | refugees; < 20- > 35 yrs., (mean 32); yrs. since arrival majority > 10 (mean 15) | Knowledge, attitudes and experiences with birth spacing and contraception | Grounded theory | Barriers to care: • large families valued from a religious and cultural standpoint, • modern contraception not discussed in Somali culture as pre-marital sex is stigmatised, • negative beliefs and fear of side effects regarding OCPs, • belief that modern contraceptives cause infertility and health concerns such as autism and down-syndrome. In contrast to a westernised approach to FP that focuses on individual autonomy, intentional choices and planned behaviours, religious fatalism strongly influences Somali women’s FP attitudes and contraceptive behaviours. | .90 |
| SRH topic: cervical cancer screening | |||||||
| Haworth, et al. (2014) [ | Assess KAP for cervical cancer and its screening modalities among Bhutanese refugee women | Convenience sampling; Nebraska community venues and residences; 2 FGDs | refugees; 19 to 60 + yrs.; yrs. since arrival < 1 (47.6%) 1–2 (26.2%) 2–3 (7.1%) 3–4 (9.5%) 4+ (7.1%) | Perceived barriers and knowledge about cervical cancer, screening, and HPV vaccination | Themes analysed (not further outlined) | Cervical screening KAP: • women had never heard of cervical cancer, • cancer did not occur in their community, • had limited knowledge of HPV. Increased susceptibility to cervical cancer: • multiple sexual partners, • unprotected sexual intercourse, • virus transfers through male partner. Barriers to screening: • construct of prevention not present among women, • shyness, feelings of exposure, potential stigma in seeking a Pap test, • transport to appointments and health system navigation, • language barrier and low trust in providers and interpreters, • high cost (though some women received a Pap test as a priority regardless to keep them healthy), • discomfort with male translators from their community, • women unsure what to ask for due to disparity in health education. Enablers included trust in providers and interpreters and community health workers as health interventionists. | .75 |
| Kim et al. (2017) [ | Explore factors associated with Pap test receipt among North Korean refugee women in South Korea | Purposive sampling; Central Seoul area, Global Together office or other community location; semi-structured interviews | refugees; 40–60+ yrs.; yrs. since arrival 6 | Health seeking behaviours and cultural descriptors (not further outlined) | Inductive content analysis | Cervical screening perspectives; • poor knowledge about cervical cancer and Pap test, • cancer worry regarding fear of abnormal Pap test, • low perceived need for preventive care, absence of symptoms main reason for non-receipt of a Pap test, • families social support, influence of family on decision-making and provider gender were key to Pap test receipt, • should be seen by a women provider regardless whether the test is free or not. Enablers to care: • women providers, • receiving family support, • National health insurance with biennial free Pap test screening. Women lack basic knowledge about cervical cancer and believe it is fatal and not preventable. National and private free cancer screening program available so newly arrived women were more likely to be screened | .90 |
| Lor et al. (2018) [ | Understand factors contributing to Burmese and Bhutanese refugee women’s decisions about cervical cancer screening. | Convenience sampling; King County Washington, private community locations; 8 FGDs (4 Burmese, 4 Bhutanese) | refugees; 20–50+ yrs.; yrs. since arrival 0–4 (57%) 5–9 (43%) | Factors influencing cervical cancer and screening knowledge, attitudes and experiences | Thematic analysis | Cervical screening decision-making: • shaped by experiences in country of origin, • only sought health care when symptomatic, • unfamiliar with preventive care, • feelings of fear and mistrust about seeking reproductive health care. Barriers to accessing care: • limited English proficiency, • problems with interpreters, • financial and transport concerns, • navigating the US health care system, • embarrassment and stigma related to cervical cancer and screening, • women unfamiliar with reproductive anatomy leading to confusion about tests specific to cervical screening. Enablers to screening: • trusted women providers and interpreters, • positive relationships with doctors and other providers, • receiving health information from family/ friends while retaining confidence in their own health care decisions. Women need culturally tailored health education and a regular source of care in early resettlement | .90 |
| Allen et al. (2019) [ | Better understand Somali refugee women’s views on cervical cancer screening for themselves and HPV vaccination for their children, particularly barriers and facilitators | Convenience sampling; Minneapolis – St Paul metropolitan area, Somali-focused community organizations/centres; 3 FGDs | refugees; 20–69 yrs. (mean 36); yrs. since arrival < 10 (19%), > 10 (74%) (mean 13) | Views on cervical cancer screening, HPV vaccination for women and their children, barriers or facilitators affecting uptake | Thematic analysis | Cancer screening perspectives: Participant’s knowledge varied on details of cervical cancer causes and prevention: • untreated infections, • having multiple sex partners, • genetic predisposition, • use of birth control. Enablers to Pap test and HPV vaccination: • web-based education, phone-based intervention, social media, community-based workshops in Somali language Pap test - some believed the test was done in the vagina to detect cancer, early signs of cancer, or infection. Participants had heard about HPV and vaccination but had limited knowledge about HPV. Pap test and HPV vaccine uptake depended on doctor recommendations and receiving husband or family support | .85 |
| Ross Perfetti et al. (2019) [ | Understand health and attitudes towards preventive care, including cancer screening, and how they relate to cultural and structural mediators of health | Snowball sampling; Philadelphia community clinic; 3 semi-structured FGDs | refugees; < 30- > 60 yrs.; yrs. since arrival 1–3 | Perspectives on wellness, cancer screening and annual physical exams | Thematic analysis | Cancer screening attitudes: • women avoided visiting a health professional until symptoms were intolerable, • embarrassment and shyness with breast and gynaecological exams, • screenings undertaken if explanations were provided. Knowledge was variable. Cancer is caused by dangerous environments: • radiation and chemical exposure, • unhealthy food and food contaminated, • mental health problems, • genetics, • untreated inflammation. Multi-level problems within hospitals and clinics prevent delivery of care: • long wait times, • inadequate evaluations and treatments, • gaps after and between providers and discriminatory practices, • financial barriers and competing priorities - limited time to engage in health activities. Enablers to care: ‘prevention is better than cure:’ demonstrated knowledge about screening. Despite a lack of cancer screenings services in Iraq, women expressed familiarity with screening. | 1.0 |
| Babatunde-Sowole et al. (2020) [ | Gain insights into attitudes and understandings about preventive healthcare and screening in Australian-West African women in New South Wales, Australia. | Purposive and snowball sampling; New South Wales-African community groups and associations centres; semi-structured interviews | refugees; 26–62 yrs.; yrs. since arrival 1–15 | Healthcare habits prior to and following migration, attitudes to and use of preventive healthcare and screening | Thematic analysis | Cervical screening perspectives: • low health literacy in relation to healthcare practices and disease aetiology, • risk factors related to family history, pollution and being sexually active, • concepts of screening and preventive care unfamiliar • competing priorities such as family commitments took precedence over seeking preventive care • cultural and curative practices of waiting for symptoms of disease before seeking care • uncomfortable with a male healthcare provider • discomfort is a concern due to previous experiences of rape, sexual violence and screening itself. Enablers to care: • increase preventive health awareness within their communities, • self-collection of Pap smears - more convenient and private, • availability of women health providers for SRH, • belief that prayer and race are protective against disease. Affordable healthcare in Australia did not change beliefs and attitudes towards screening/preventive health care – seen as indulgent luxury. | .85 |
| SRH topic: breast screening | |||||||
| Saadi et al. (2015) [ | Explore Bosnian, Iraqi, and Somali women refugees’ beliefs about preventive care and breast cancer screening | Convenience and snowball sampling; General Hospital Chelsea Healthcare Centre, Massachusetts; semi structured interviews | refugees; Bosnian 41–75 (mean 54) Somali 27–58 (mean 40) Iraqi 23–55, (mean 41); yrs. since arrival Range < 1 mth to 16 (mean 6) | Knowledge about preventive health care and screening exams for women’s health, knowledge about and barriers to mammograms. | Thematic analysis | Breast screen perspectives and barriers: • fear of pain and diagnosis, modesty, • work and childcare commitments, • varying degrees of medical exposure to doctors in home countries, • home country medical systems focus on acute, not preventive care, • navigating and understanding the host country appointment system, • impact of war on health systems; understanding preventive breast care, SRH did not exist in home countries [Somalia]. • despite awareness of mammography, few Iraqi women had it before resettlement. Enablers to breast screening: • outreach efforts, • appointment reminders, assistance with scheduling and personal contact from HCPs, • perceptions of how medical infrastructure compared with home countries inadequacies, • positive attitude toward HCPs with the increased level of attention and care received, • someone who spoke their language and could explain what was expected, Women across groups indicated willingness to overcome systemic barriers and personal fears of pain or bad news. | 1.0 |
| Parajuli, et al. (2019) [ | Explore perceptions and perceived barriers of Bhutanese refugee women accessing and using breast-screening. | Purposive sampling; Melbourne participants homes; in-depth interviews | refugees; 50–70 yrs.; yrs. since arrival 4–7 | Experiences of accessing cervical and breast-screening services | Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis | Breast screening perspectives and barriers: • lack of knowledge about screening importance in detecting problems - though women knew of breast cancer, • lack of motivational factors - doctor had not raised breast screening as important, • problem-triggered health seeking behaviour due to strong cultural factors, • feelings of embarrassment exposing certain body parts, • communication difficulties due to poor literacy and limited English language proficiency, • disliked sharing sensitive health information with their children acting as interpreters, Enablers to care: mammogram undertaken following a doctor’s recommendation | .90 |
N/S not stated, HC host country, CO country of origin
Characteristics of quantitative studies and main findings
| First Author, (Year); | Stated study objectives | Recruitment method; | Sample size; Classification; | Outcome measures | Data analysis | Main results; | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRH topic: Family planning (FP) | |||||||
| Morrison (2000) [ | As outlined in Table | Walking through camps women were randomly asked to participate; Khao Phlu refugee camp Thailand maternal and child health centre; survey | As outlined in Table | Contraceptive knowledge, beliefs and practices. Perceptions about FP | N/S | Contraceptive knowledge and use: • 82% of married women wanted to stop or delay childbearing, • 12% reported using a modern method of contraception, • 61% mentioned fear of side effects, • 24% cited lack of information on contraception, • 42% reported discomfort over seeking contraceptives, • 32–48% of women unaware contraceptive methods were available at refugee health centre and none knew about emergency contraception. | .64 |
| Raheel et al. (2012) [ | Measure differences in knowledge and practice of contraception between healthcare subsidised and unsubsidised groups | Systematic random sampling to select households; Karachi settlements of Afghan refugees; questionnaire survey | refugees; subsidy/no subsidy mean 33%/ 30%; yrs. since arrival subsidy/no subsidy mean 10/13 | Knowledge and practice about FP and contraceptive use with and without healthcare subsidies | SPSS Mean/SD Binary logistic regression Adjusted odds ratios 95% CIs | Family planning awareness and use: • 90% in subsidised group aware of FP, compared to 45% in unsubsidised group, • use of contraceptives > 2-fold in subsidised group versus unsubsidised, • access to subsidised care more likely resulted in contraceptive use with advancing age as compared to unsubsidised care. Positive attitude towards FP and higher contraceptive use among Afghan women receiving a healthcare subsidy compared to those not receiving a subsidy despite their conservative background and marginal economic status. | 1.0 |
| Kisindja et al. (2017) [ | Investigate reproductive health and FP knowledge and needs of newly internally displaced women in North Kivu province. | Convenience sampling door to door; two Mugunga displacement camps; verbally administered survey | internally displaced; 14-45 yrs. (mean 28); yrs. since arrival < 1 yr (34%) < 2 yrs. (95%) | Reproductive health history, contraceptive use, and FP exposures, knowledge and desires | N/S | Contraceptive knowledge and use: • 84% previously received information on contraception, • 35% women knew of at least two contraceptive methods, • 31% reported ever using contraception, • 62% cited lack of interest, 21% lack of knowledge and 12% religious’ opposition for never using contraception Contraceptive knowledge was moderate actual usage was low. | .73 |
| Tanabe et al. 2017 [ | As outlined in Table | Sampling frame – UNHCRs database and registered mobile phone and spatial sampling; Multiple country locations - refugee camps, settlements, urban areas; household survey | refugees; 15–49 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | Contraception- awareness, ever use, current use, and unmet need for FP | Descriptive frequencies Binary logistic regression | Contraceptive awareness and use: • 74% reported awareness of at least 1 modern method of contraception, • 48% married women reported ever use of modern contraceptives significantly < unmarried women 16%, • 26% married women reported currently using any modern method to avoid or delay pregnancy, significantly > unmarried women 3%, • 7% of women reported unmet need for contraception, • Married women were over 7 x more likely to report unmet need compared with unmarried women. | 1.0 |
| Raben and van den Muijsenbergh (2018) [ | Examine the extent Netherlands General Practitioners discuss and prescribe contraceptives to female refugees compared with other female migrants and native Dutch women | Extracted data from General Practice surgery databases; Nigmegen, Rotterdam and Amsterdam, five General Practices; database searches | refugees; 15–49 yrs.; yrs. since arrival mean 6.5 yrs. (range < 1–34) | Contraceptive method discussed or prescribed with General Practitioner | Two-tailed Pearson chi-squared test, independent samples t-test, one-way ANOVA, binary logistic regression | Contraception access: • 51% General Practitioners reported discussing contraceptives with women refugees, significantly < other migrants, 66% and < native Dutch women, 84%, • in women from Sub Saharan Africa, contraception was significantly less often discussed, 29% compared with refugee women from other regions 68%. Contraceptives were discussed or prescribed significantly < with refugees and other migrant women compared with native Dutch women. | .86 |
| Pierce (2019) [ | Examine regional coverage, source, and method of contraceptives; variation in reproductive health and social experiences by source of contraception; influences on utilisation of reproductive health services | Recruitment method N/S; Jordan- urban area refugee camp households; demographic and health survey | refugees; 15–24 (13%) 25–39 (56%) 40–49 (31%); yrs. since arrival: multi-generational displacement | Modern contraceptive use, FP education at a health facility, contraceptive advice from medical personnel, source of contraception | Descriptive statistics Logistic regression of reproductive health odds ratios for background variables | Contraceptive use and intention: • 14–43% used contraception, 15–55% contraceptive source (govt, pharmacy, private) used, 5–13% modern contraceptive method used, • educational attainment, age, employment, number of living children, and wealth had a significant effect on modern contraception use, • refugee camp existence significantly increases the likelihood of talking about FP at a health facility, • women with large numbers of children > 13 x more likely to utilise UN relief agencies for contraception than those with fewer children. Women living in refugee camps have greater access to FP resources | .91 |
| SRH topic: cervical cancer screening and breast cancer screening | |||||||
| Barnes et al. (2004) [ | Explore reproductive health concerns of Bosnian, Cuban, Vietnamese and other refugee women in the US | Recruitment method N/S; Refugee Health Screening Program at local health department; review of medical charts | refugees; 18–74 yrs. (mean 34); yrs. since arrival N/S | Self-reported medical history, reproductive health problems identified, referrals made, and prescriptions written | Descriptive statistics, z approximation test | Breast and cervical screening practices: • 14% had at least one mammogram, • 86% had never had a mammogram, • 67% of women in the US had at least one mammogram for screening, • rates of mammogram differed between US and refugee women significantly, • 24% of refugee women had a Pap test within the past 3 yrs. compared to US women 79%. | .77 |
| Redwood- Campbell et al. (2008) [ | Describe reproductive health and mental health-related issues among Kosovar refugees settling in Hamilton, Ontario Canada | Random selection of phone numbers - fieldworkers contacted families; Hamilton, Ontario (not further described); survey questionnaire | > 18 yrs. 85 18-49 yrs. 65 > =50 yrs. 19; yrs. since arrival N/S | Ever had a Pap smear, ever heard of a Pap smear, use of contraception, how to access contraception, ever had or heard of a mammogram | Descriptive statistics | Contraceptive use: • 14% reported using some form of contraception Screening awareness and access: • > 50 yrs., 5% of Kosovar women had ever received a mammogram, • 34% of women had ever received a Pap smear, of these 85% had received service in Canada, • Kosovar women reported cervical and breast cancer screening rates in the home country or since arrival were significantly < Canadian rates. Women have little or no history of routine preventive care similar to that which exists in Canada | .50 |
Lofters et al. (2011) [ Middle East, North Africa, East Asia, the Pacific, Sub-Saharan African | Determine the independent effects on cervical cancer screening of; sociodemographic factors, health care system, culture and migration for immigrant women in Ontario. | Recruitment method N/S; Ontario’s central metropolitan areas; Data extraction from Landed Immigrant Data System database | refugees; 18–66 yrs.; yrs. since arrival N/S | Women identified as appropriately screened - at least one Pap test in the 3 yr study period | Stratified multi-variate analysis Multi-variate Poisson models stratified SAS for adjusted relative risks | Factors associated with lack of screening: • not being in the 35–49 yr age group, • resident in lowest-income neighbourhoods, • not being in a primary care patient enrolment model, • not having a provider from the same region, • not having a woman provider. For all women, the highest population-attributable risk was seen for not having a woman provider: • 17% for Middle East and North Africa, • 27% for East Asia and the Pacific. Immigrant class was only significant for Sub-Saharan African women and Western European women, with refugees being at > risk of non-screening in these two groups. Women should connect with the health care system soon after arrival and find a regular source of primary care. | 1.0 |
| Haworth et al. (2014) [ | As outlined in Table | Convenience sampling; Burmese community venues and residences Omaha; online survey tool | As outlined in Table | Perceived susceptibility to and severity of disease and perceived barriers and benefits to screening | Descriptive statistics | Cervical cancer and screening practices: • 22% reported ever hearing of a Pap test, • 14% reported ever having Pap test, • 33% perceived susceptibility to cervical cancer, • 71% women who had heard about Pap tests tended to believe more strongly about curability if discovered early compared to 45% of women who never heard about the test A significant lack of knowledge exists in this community regarding cervical cancer and screening practices. Community health workers as health interventionists was well received. | .64 |
| SRH topic: General physical examination | |||||||
| Odunukan et al. (2015) [ | Understand Somali women’s comfort with components of physical exam by providers and interpreters of different genders and races | Convenience sample; Mid-west United States, Primary Care Internal Medicine Clinics; pictorial survey | refugees; 18–90 yrs. (median 46); yrs. since arrival median 11 yrs. (range 0.2–30) | Participant comfort level with body parts being examined by the pictured physician Patient–interpreter gender concordance acceptability | Descriptive statistics Paired ratings of discomfort Bowker’s test of symmetry Simple linear regression | Physical examination: • 98% reported “no problem” to physical examination by a woman provider, • genitalia/pelvic examination (82%), breast examination (81%), and abdominal examination (71%) by male providers was “definitely a problem”, • chest/back examination (29%), extremity examination (28%), and head/neck examination (25%) by male providers was “definitely a problem”. Women preferred a woman provider for conducting examination for the pelvic, breast, and abdominal examinations and preferred woman interpreters to be present. | .77 |
| SRH topic: Female genital cutting | |||||||
| Banke-Thomas et al. (2019) [ | Assess factors that influence maternal and reproductive health access across four health care dimensions | Community networks using snowball sampling; Franklin County, Ohio – participants residences; community-based survey | refugees; 18–19 yrs. 46 20–34 yrs. 215 35–49 yrs. 166; yrs. since arrival < 4 yrs. 139 > 4 yrs. 288 | Willingness to seek care, gaining entry to the health system, seeing a primary provider and seeing a specialist | Descriptive statistics Multivariate analyses. Cross tabs bivariate analysis odds ratios 95% CI and | Factors unique to Somali refugee population: • younger, single women were more willing to seek care vs older, married women. • 81% stated not having insurance was the most frequent reason for postponing public or private care • minors were 2.5 x more willing to seek care than those who arrived in the US as adults Those with insurance were at least: • 2 x more willing to seek care • 3 x more likely to enter the health system • 3 x less likely to have difficulty in seeing a primary provider • odds of Somali women not able to speak English well, being willing to seek care was almost 80% < those who were able to speak English very well • odds of Somali women with female genital cutting being willing to seek care were about 50% < those who were not circumcised | 1.0 |
N/S not stated, HC host country, CO country of origin
Summary of main themes
| Main themes | Sub themes (Country setting – High-income country-HIC/ Low-middle-income country-LMIC) |
|---|---|
| Interpersonal and patient encounter factors - patient interactions with health care systems and HCPs | Knowledge, awareness and use of preventive SRH care (HIC and LMIC) |
| Perceived need for preventive SRH care (HIC and LMIC) | |
| Language and communication (HIC and LMIC) | |
| Health care system factors – health system factors and their impact on outcomes | Health care provider discrimination and lack of quality health resources (HIC and LMIC) |
| Financial barriers and unmet need (LMIC) | |
| Health care provider characteristics (HIC and LMIC) | |
| Health system navigation (HIC and LMIC) | |
| Sociocultural factors and the refugee experience - the influence on outcomes of refugee and resettlement experiences. | Family influence (HIC and LMIC) |
| Religious factors (LMIC) | |
| Cultural attitudes (HIC and LMIC) |