Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective

Since 2015 the need for evidence-based guidance in primary health care management of refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants has dramatically increased. The aims of this study were to identify the challenges met by primary care physicians in Switzerland, by performing semi-structured interviews and...

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Main Authors: Johanna Oehri, Afona Chernet, Sonja Merten, Veronique Sydow, Daniel H. Paris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-07-01
Series:Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319231181878
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author Johanna Oehri
Afona Chernet
Sonja Merten
Veronique Sydow
Daniel H. Paris
author_facet Johanna Oehri
Afona Chernet
Sonja Merten
Veronique Sydow
Daniel H. Paris
author_sort Johanna Oehri
collection DOAJ
description Since 2015 the need for evidence-based guidance in primary health care management of refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants has dramatically increased. The aims of this study were to identify the challenges met by primary care physicians in Switzerland, by performing semi-structured interviews and to identify possible approaches and interventions. Between January 2019 and January 2020, 20 GPs in 3 Swiss cantons were interviewed. The interviews were transcribed, coded with MAXQDA 18, and analyzed using the framework methodology. Following relevant findings were highlighted; (i) problems relating to health insurance companies among (health-insured) asylum seekers and refugees were negligible; (ii) there is a high acceptance for vaccination by refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants; (iii) limitations in time for consultations and adequate reimbursement for practitioners pose a serious challenge; (iv) the majority of consultations are complaint-oriented, preventive consultations are rare; and (v) the language barrier is a major challenge for psychosocial consultations, whereas this appears less relevant for somatic complaints. The following issues were identified as high priority needs by the study participants; (i) increased networking between GPs, that is, establishing bridging services with asylum centers, (ii) improved training opportunities for GPs in Migration Medicine with regular updates of current guidelines, and (iii) a standardisation of health documentation facilitating exchange of medical data, that is, digital/paper-based “health booklet” or “health pass.”
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spelling doaj.art-9ac2379137344124b3472e80389a19792023-07-03T07:03:27ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Primary Care & Community Health2150-13272023-07-011410.1177/21501319231181878Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician PerspectiveJohanna Oehri0Afona Chernet1Sonja Merten2Veronique Sydow3Daniel H. Paris4University of Basel, Basel, SwitzerlandUniversity of Basel, Basel, SwitzerlandUniversity of Basel, Basel, SwitzerlandUniversity of Basel, Basel, SwitzerlandUniversity of Basel, Basel, SwitzerlandSince 2015 the need for evidence-based guidance in primary health care management of refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants has dramatically increased. The aims of this study were to identify the challenges met by primary care physicians in Switzerland, by performing semi-structured interviews and to identify possible approaches and interventions. Between January 2019 and January 2020, 20 GPs in 3 Swiss cantons were interviewed. The interviews were transcribed, coded with MAXQDA 18, and analyzed using the framework methodology. Following relevant findings were highlighted; (i) problems relating to health insurance companies among (health-insured) asylum seekers and refugees were negligible; (ii) there is a high acceptance for vaccination by refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants; (iii) limitations in time for consultations and adequate reimbursement for practitioners pose a serious challenge; (iv) the majority of consultations are complaint-oriented, preventive consultations are rare; and (v) the language barrier is a major challenge for psychosocial consultations, whereas this appears less relevant for somatic complaints. The following issues were identified as high priority needs by the study participants; (i) increased networking between GPs, that is, establishing bridging services with asylum centers, (ii) improved training opportunities for GPs in Migration Medicine with regular updates of current guidelines, and (iii) a standardisation of health documentation facilitating exchange of medical data, that is, digital/paper-based “health booklet” or “health pass.”https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319231181878
spellingShingle Johanna Oehri
Afona Chernet
Sonja Merten
Veronique Sydow
Daniel H. Paris
Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective
Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
title Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective
title_full Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective
title_fullStr Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective
title_short Improving Primary Healthcare Access for Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Qualitative Study From a Swiss Family Physician Perspective
title_sort improving primary healthcare access for asylum seekers and refugees a qualitative study from a swiss family physician perspective
url https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319231181878
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