School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 27 St Andrew's Road, Parktown, Johannesburg 2193, South Africa.
Centre for Health Policy & South African Research Chair, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 27 St Andrew's Road, Parktown, Johannesburg 2193, South Africa.
Health Policy Plan. 2021 Sep 9;36(8):1292-1306. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czab038.
Notwithstanding the promise of the inclusivity of universal health coverage (UHC), the integration of migrants and refugees into host countries' health systems remains elusive and contested. In South Africa, there is insufficient scholarly attention on UHC, migrants and refugees, given the country's strategic importance in Africa and the envisaged implementation of the National Health Insurance (NHI) system. In this paper, a social exclusion conceptual framework is used to explore whether South African legislation, health policies and perspectives or actions of health policy actors facilitate UHC for migrants and refugees or exacerbate their exclusion. We combined a review of legislation and policies since 1994, with semi-structured interviews with 18 key informants from government, academia, civil society organizations and a United Nations organization. We used thematic analysis to identify themes and sub-themes from the qualitative data. The South African Constitution and the National Health Act facilitate UHC, while the Immigration Act and the 2019 NHI Bill make the legal status of migrants the most significant determinant of healthcare access. This legislative disjuncture is exacerbated by variations in content, interpretation and/or implementation of policies at the provincial level. Resource constraints in the public health sector contribute to the perceived dysfunctionality of the public healthcare system, which affects the financial classification, quality of care and access for all public sector patients. However, migrants and refugees bear the brunt of the reported dysfunctionality, in addition to experiences of medical xenophobia. These issues need to be addressed to ensure that South Africa's quest for UHC expressed through the NHI system is realized.
尽管全民健康覆盖(UHC)具有包容性的承诺,但移民和难民融入东道国的卫生系统仍然难以实现,并且存在争议。在南非,由于该国在非洲的战略重要性以及拟议实施国家健康保险(NHI)制度,因此对 UHC、移民和难民的学术关注不足。在本文中,使用社会排斥概念框架来探讨南非立法、卫生政策和卫生政策行为者的观点或行动是否有利于移民和难民实现 UHC,还是加剧了他们的排斥。我们结合了对 1994 年以来立法和政策的审查,以及对来自政府、学术界、民间社会组织和一个联合国组织的 18 名主要信息提供者的半结构化访谈。我们使用主题分析从定性数据中识别主题和子主题。南非宪法和国家卫生法促进了 UHC,而移民法和 2019 年 NHI 法案使移民的法律地位成为获得医疗保健的最重要决定因素。这种立法上的不连续性因省级政策内容、解释和/或执行的差异而加剧。公共卫生部门的资源限制导致公共医疗保健系统的功能失调,这影响了所有公共部门患者的财务分类、护理质量和获得。然而,移民和难民除了经历医疗仇外心理外,还首当其冲地受到报告的功能失调的影响。需要解决这些问题,以确保南非通过 NHI 系统实现全民健康覆盖的目标。