Literature DB >> 36040581

Access to Health Services Among Forced Migrants in Tanzania: A Cluster Randomized Cross Sectional Study of 3560 Congolese and Burundian Refugees.

Zachary Obinna Enumah1, Mohamed Yunus Rafiq2, Omar Juma3, Frank Manyama4, Hilary Ngude5, Kent Stevens4, Joseph Sakran4.   

Abstract

Despite significant advances in the understanding of the global burden of surgical disease, limited research focuses on access to health and surgical services among refugees, especially in east Africa. The goal of this study was to describe patterns of access to transportation to health services among Congolese and Burundian refugees in Tanzania. We utilized cluster random sampling to perform a large, cross-sectional study in Nyarugusu refugee camp, Tanzania using an adapted version of the Surgeon Overseas Assessment Tool (SOSAS). We randomly selected 132 clusters out of 1472 clusters, randomly selected two people from all households in those clusters. Data analysis was performed in STATA (Stata Version 16, College Station, TX). A total of 3560 participants were included in the study including 1863 Congolese refugees and 1697 Burundian refugees. The majority of refugees reported they were generally healthy (n = 2792, 79.3%). The most common period of waiting to be seen at the health center was between three and 5 h (n = 1502, 45.8%), and over half of all refugees waited between 3 and 12 h to be seen. There was heterogeneity in other intra-camp referral networks (e.g. to and from traditional healer and hospital). Finally, a low percentage (3%) of participants reported leaving the refugee camp to seek health care elsewhere, and Congolese refugees were more likely to pursue self-referral in this manner. To our knowledge, this is the largest study focused on access to transportation among refugees in Tanzania and sub-Saharan Africa. Most participants reported financial difficulty always affording transportation costs with significant wait times occurring once arrived at the hospital. Our study does suggest that some independent health care seeking did occur outside of the camp-based services. Future research may focus more specifically on barriers to timely servicing of patients and patterns of self-referral.Please confirm if the author names are presented accurately and in the correct sequence (given name, middle name/initial, family name). Author 1 Given name: [Zachary Obinna] Last Name [Enumah] and Author 2 Given name: [Mohamed Yunus] Last Name [Rafiq]. Also, kindly confirm the details in the metadata are correct.Confirmed.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 36040581     DOI: 10.1007/s10903-022-01387-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health        ISSN: 1557-1912


  10 in total

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Journal:  Aust J Prim Health       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.307

3.  Barriers to access to health care for newly resettled sub-Saharan refugees in Australia.

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4.  Barriers to access reproductive health care for pregnant adolescent girls: a qualitative study in Tanzania.

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Review 5.  Too far to walk: maternal mortality in context.

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6.  Sociocultural barriers and malaria health care in Tanzania.

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7.  Self-reported Determinants of Access to Surgical Care in 3 Developing Countries.

Authors:  Joseph D Forrester; Jared A Forrester; Thaim B Kamara; Reinou S Groen; Sunil Shrestha; Shailvi Gupta; Patrick Kyamanywa; Robin T Petroze; Adam L Kushner; Sherry M Wren
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Review 8.  Charitable platforms in global surgery: a systematic review of their effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, sustainability, and role training.

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9.  Prevalence of surgically correctable conditions among children in a mixed urban-rural community in Nigeria using the SOSAS survey tool: Implications for paediatric surgical capacity-building.

Authors:  Adesoji O Ademuyiwa; Tinuola O Odugbemi; Christopher O Bode; Olumide A Elebute; Felix M Alakaloko; Eyitayo O Alabi; Olufemi Bankole; Oluwaseun Ladipo-Ajayi; Justina O Seyi-Olajide; Babasola Okusanya; Ogechi Abazie; Iyabo Y Ademuyiwa; Amanda Onwuka; Tu Tran; Ayomide Makanjuola; Shailvi Gupta; Riinu Ots; Ewen M Harrison; Dan Poenaru; Benedict C Nwomeh
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10.  Surgical referrals in Northern Tanzania: a prospective assessment of rates, preventability, reasons and patterns.

Authors:  Desmond T Jumbam; Gopal Menon; Shehnaz Alidina; Boniface Nguhuni; Tenzing N Lama; William Lodge Ii; Sarah Maongezi; Ntuli A Kapologwe; Isabelle Citron; David Barash; John Varallo; Erin Barringer; Monica Cainer; Mpoki Ulisubisya
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  10 in total

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