Enhancing the wellbeing of refugees living with advanced life-limiting illness in high-income resettlement countries: A systematic review.

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Merrington H, Mahimbo A, DiGiacomo M, Roxas-Harris B, Agar Mr, Nathan S, Hayen A, Heywood Ae, Dawson A
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Abstract

Background: Refugees experience barriers to health care after resettlement and may have distinct palliative care needs. There is no systematic guidance to support person-centred palliative care services that are responsive to refugees' needs and preferences.

Aim: To synthesis evidence regarding factors enhancing the wellbeing of refugees with advanced life-limiting illness, and their families, to inform palliative care in high-income resettlement countries.

Design: A systematic review of primary research studies. We applied a strength-based assets framework to the data extraction and synthesis and conducted a directed content analysis.

Data sources: We searched nine electronic databases.

Results: Ten of the 1006 studies identified were included in the review: two qualitative, one quantitative and seven case studies. We identified 17 assets that enhanced refugees' wellbeing: resilience, religion, spirituality, sense of identity, belonging, community connections, health and death literacy, acculturation, family and social support, social capital, community structures, access to funeral information, access to services, palliative care service approaches, and workforce capacity. Resilience was linked to identity and belonging, connections within cultural and religious networks, social capital and creating meaningful funeral rituals in resettlement. Palliative care workforce capacity, death literacy, acculturation, refugees' grief experiences and willingness to discuss and plan for death, influenced refugees' attitudes to palliative care, communication with staff about treatment, prognosis and spiritual care, and care outcomes.

Conclusions: Further research, co-designed with diverse refugee groups, is needed to inform palliative care service approaches, develop interventions to strengthen key assets and explore the nuanced role of social capital in end-of-life care.

提高高收入安置国患有晚期限制生命疾病的难民的福祉:一项系统综述。
背景:难民在重新安置后遇到保健障碍,可能有明显的姑息治疗需求。没有系统的指导来支持针对难民需求和偏好的以人为本的姑息治疗服务。目的:综合有关提高患有晚期生命限制疾病的难民及其家庭福祉的因素的证据,为高收入安置国的姑息治疗提供信息。设计:对初步研究的系统回顾。我们将基于强度的资产框架应用于数据提取和合成,并进行了定向内容分析。数据来源:检索了9个电子数据库。结果:1006项研究中有10项纳入了综述:2项定性研究,1项定量研究和7项案例研究。我们确定了17项增强难民福祉的资产:复原力、宗教、灵性、认同感、归属感、社区联系、健康和死亡素养、文化适应、家庭和社会支持、社会资本、社区结构、获得葬礼信息、获得服务、姑息治疗服务方法和劳动力能力。复原力与身份和归属感、文化和宗教网络内的联系、社会资本以及在重新安置时创造有意义的葬礼仪式有关。姑息治疗工作人员的能力、死亡素养、文化适应、难民的悲伤经历以及讨论和计划死亡的意愿,影响了难民对姑息治疗的态度、与工作人员就治疗、预后和精神护理的沟通以及护理结果。结论:需要与不同的难民群体共同设计进一步的研究,为姑息治疗服务方法提供信息,制定干预措施以加强关键资产,并探索社会资本在临终关怀中的微妙作用。
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来源期刊
Palliative Medicine
Palliative Medicine 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
9.10%
发文量
125
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Palliative Medicine is a highly ranked, peer reviewed scholarly journal dedicated to improving knowledge and clinical practice in the palliative care of patients with far advanced disease. This outstanding journal features editorials, original papers, review articles, case reports, correspondence and book reviews. Essential reading for all members of the palliative care team. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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