Peterson Paula, Ali Samira, Kenneh Alie, Wakefield Ally
Mater Misericordiae Brisbane Ltd, Mater Centre for Integrated Care and Innovation, Raymond Terrace, South Brisbane, Qld 4101, Australia; and Corresponding author. Email:
Mater Misericordiae Brisbane Ltd, Mater Centre for Integrated Care and Innovation, Raymond Terrace, South Brisbane, Qld 4101, Australia.
Aust J Prim Health. 2019 Apr;25(2):113-117. doi: 10.1071/PY18139.
There is a growing population of people from refugee backgrounds settling in Australia. They have often been forced to flee from their homes in violent circumstances and may have spent many years in refugee camps with poor health support. There are multiple barriers to their effective access to health services. Community engagement with this community can be tokenistic and difficult to effect. This paper highlights the importance of developing a meaningful strategy for community engagement that is not 'one-size-fits-all', which is achieved over time. There is a rich resource available to health practitioners if engagement with refugee-background communities is managed according to the set of trauma-informed and structural principles outlined in this paper.
越来越多有难民背景的人在澳大利亚定居。他们常常被迫在暴力环境中逃离家园,可能在医疗支持匮乏的难民营中度过了许多年。他们在有效获得医疗服务方面存在多重障碍。社区与这个群体的接触可能只是表面形式,难以产生实际效果。本文强调了制定一种有意义的社区接触策略的重要性,这种策略不是“一刀切”的,而是需要随着时间推移逐步实现。如果按照本文概述的一系列创伤知情和结构性原则来管理与有难民背景社区的接触,那么健康从业者将获得丰富的资源。