Accessibility and utilization of health-care services among rural–urban migrants in Ghana: A scoping review

Godfred Otchere, Samuel Egyakwa Ankomah, Adam Fusheini, Emmanuel Kumah, Samuel Kofi Agyei
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Abstract

Since the second half of the 20th century, internal migration patterns in Ghana have been dominated by movements from rural (or northern) to urban (or southern) areas. Numerous studies report wide socioeconomic gaps between the geographical north and south of Ghana, explaining the unidirectional movement in search of better opportunities. Differences in personal health profiles, values, and beliefs mean that internal migrants face a higher risk of ill health than urban natives. Compounding this issue is the barriers that impede their access to and utilization of health-care services. We synthesized evidence from existing literature to understand internal migrants’ access to and utilization of healthcare in Ghana, as well as their coping strategies. This review followed Arksey and O’Malley’s guidelines for conducting scoping reviews. We searched PubMed, EconLit, CINAHL, PsychINFO, and Medline (Ovid) electronic databases for studies published from January 2012 to June 2022. In addition, a manual literature search was conducted on Google by examining the reference lists of selected articles to identify other relevant studies. The majority of the studies (n = 12 [75%]) focused on female migrants, while 4 (25%) included both male and female migrants. This review identified several factors affecting access to health-care services for internal migrants in Ghana. These factors included infrastructural, financial, and language barriers, as well as long patient waiting times. Significantly, these barriers resulted in increased self-medication and self-diagnosis among internal migrants, leading to overall poor health outcomes. Based on the study findings, we propose a multidimensional approach to bridging the health access gap for internal migrants. This approach involves improving health system factors such as health service delivery, health workforce, availability of essential medicines, and health finance reforms to provide quality health-care services at affordable or no cost, while considering the socioeconomic and cultural conditions of the internal migrants.
加纳城乡移民获得和利用医疗保健服务的情况:范围界定审查
自 20 世纪下半叶以来,加纳的国内移徙模式主要是从农村(或北部)向城市(或南 部)迁移。大量研究报告显示,加纳南北部地区之间存在巨大的社会经济差距,这也是单向迁移以寻求更好机会的原因。个人健康状况、价值观和信仰的差异意味着国内移民比城市本地人面临更高的健康不佳风险。阻碍他们获得和利用医疗保健服务的障碍使这一问题更加复杂。我们综合了现有文献中的证据,以了解加纳国内移民获得和利用医疗保健服务的情况,以及他们的应对策略。本综述遵循 Arksey 和 O'Malley 的范围界定综述指南。我们在 PubMed、EconLit、CINAHL、PsychINFO 和 Medline (Ovid) 等电子数据库中检索了 2012 年 1 月至 2022 年 6 月期间发表的研究。此外,我们还在谷歌上进行了人工文献检索,查看了所选文章的参考文献目录,以确定其他相关研究。大多数研究(n = 12 [75%])侧重于女性移民,而 4 项研究(25%)既包括男性移民,也包括女性移民。本综述确定了影响加纳国内移民获得医疗保健服务的几个因素。这些因素包括基础设施、资金和语言障碍,以及病人等待时间过长。值得注意的是,这些障碍导致国内移民自我用药和自我诊断的情况增多,从而导致整体健康状况不佳。根据研究结果,我们提出了一种多维方法来缩小国内移民在获得医疗服务方面的差距。该方法涉及改善卫生系统因素,如卫生服务的提供、卫生工作者队伍、基本药物的供应以及卫生财政改革,以负担得起或免费的方式提供高质量的医疗保健服务,同时考虑到国内移民的社会经济和文化条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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