促进生活在高收入国家的寻求庇护者健康和自我保健的政策和举措/方案:叙述性审查

IF 1.2 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Gloria Nkhoma, C. Lim, G. Kennedy, I. Stupans
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的本文旨在确定患有慢性非传染性疾病(CNCD)的寻求庇护者的医疗保健权利,以促进他们的健康和自我保健,并探索有可能促进这一人群自我保健的卫生政策、举措和计划。设计/方法论/方法通过搜索EMBASE、CINAHL、WEB of SCIENCE和PSYCINFO数据库中2010年至2021年发表的文章进行的文献叙述性综述。收录的文章侧重于有可能促进居住在高收入国家的成年寻求庇护者健康的政策、方案或举措。包括无证移民和有心理健康问题的人等其他移民群体的研究被排除在外。根据研究目标对符合纳入标准的11项研究进行了评估。发现免费获得医疗保健服务和药品、免费获得食品银行和超市示范食品银行、英语和烹饪课程、社区融合培训课程以及文化能力强的医护人员被发现可以促进健康和自我保健。关于患有CNCD的成年寻求庇护者的自我照顾和健康促进的研究很少。CNCD代表了寻求庇护者的高疾病负担,但在报告的研究中优先级较低。原创性/价值这篇叙述性综述首次明确关注患有CNCD的高收入国家的寻求庇护者,不包括心理健康状况,并探索加强健康促进的举措、计划和政策,以促进这一人群的自我保健。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Policies and initiatives/programs that promote health and self-care in asylum seekers living in high income countries: a narrative review
Purpose This paper aims to identify health-care entitlements that exist for asylum seekers with chronic non-communicable disease (CNCD) that promote their health and self-care, and to explore health policies, initiatives and programmes with the potential to foster self-care in this populace. Design/methodology/approach Narrative review of literature conducted by searching EMBASE, CINAHL, WEB OF SCIENCE and PSYCINFO databases for articles published from 2010 to 2021. Included articles focussed on policies, programmes or initiatives with the potential to promote health in adult asylum seekers residing in high-income countries. Studies inclusive of other migrant groups such as undocumented migrants and those with mental health conditions were excluded. Eleven studies fitting the inclusion criteria were assessed against the study objectives. Findings Free access to health-care services and pharmaceutical products, free access to food banks and supermarket model food banks, English and cooking lessons, community integration training sessions and culturally competent health-care workers were found to promote health and self-care. There is little research on self-care and health promotion in adult asylum seekers with CNCD. CNCDs represent high burden of disease in asylum seekers but have a low priority in reported research. Originality/value This narrative review is the first to explicitly focus on asylum seekers in high-income countries with CNCD, excluding mental health conditions, and to explore initiatives, programmes and policies that enhance health promotion to facilitate self-care in this populace.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: nternational Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare (IJHRH) is an international, peer reviewed journal with a unique practical approach to promoting race equality, inclusion and human rights in health and social care. The journal publishes scholarly and double blind peer-reviewed papers of the highest standard, including case studies and book reviews. IJHRH aims include: -To explore what is currently known about discrimination and disadvantage with a particular focus on health and social care -Push the barriers of the human rights discourse by identifying new avenues for healthcare practice and policy internationally -Create bridges between policymakers, practitioners and researchers -Identify and understand the social determinants of health equity and practical interventions to overcome barriers at national and international levels. The journal welcomes papers which use varied approaches, including discussion of theory, comparative studies, systematic evaluation of interventions, analysis of qualitative data and study of health and social care institutions and the political process. Papers published in IJHRH: -Clearly demonstrate the implications of the research -Provide evidence-rich information -Provoke reflection and support critical analysis of both challenges and strengths -Share examples of best practice and ‘what works’, including user perspectives IJHRH is a hugely valuable source of information for researchers, academics, students, practitioners, managers, policy-makers, commissioning bodies, social workers, psychologists, nurses, voluntary sector workers, service users and carers internationally.
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