Centre for Primary Care and Health Services Research, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
School of Medicine, Keele University, Keele, UK.
Health Expect. 2022 Oct;25(5):2107-2123. doi: 10.1111/hex.13433. Epub 2022 Jan 19.
Around 2 million people have migrated from Central and Eastern Europe to the UK since 2004. The UK Central and Eastern European Community (UK-CEE) are disproportionately exposed to the social determinants of poor physical and mental health. Their health and healthcare beliefs remain under-researched, particularly regarding primary care.
This review explores UK-CEE community members' use and perceptions of UK general practice.
A systematic search of nine bibliographic databases identified 2094 publications that fulfilled the search criteria. Grey literature searches identified 16 additional relevant publications. Screening by title and abstract identified 201 publications of relevance, decreasing to 65 after full-text screening. Publications were critically appraised, with data extracted and coded. Thematic analysis using constant comparison allowed generation of higher-order thematic constructs.
Full UK-CEE national representation was achieved. Comparatively low levels of GP registration were described, with ability, desire and need to engage with GP services shaped by the interconnected nature of individual community members' cultural and sociodemographic factors. Difficulties overcoming access and in-consultation barriers are common, with health expectations frequently unmet. Distrust and dissatisfaction with general practice often persist, promoting alternative health-seeking approaches including transnational healthcare. Marginalized UK-CEE community subgroups including Roma, trafficked and homeless individuals have particularly poor GP engagement and outcomes. Limited data on the impact of Brexit and COVID-19 could be identified.
Review findings demonstrate the need for codesigned approaches to remove barriers to engagement, culturally adapt and develop trust in GP care for UK-CEE individuals.
Community members and stakeholders shaped the conceptualisation of the review question and validation of emergent themes.
自 2004 年以来,约有 200 万人从中东欧移民到英国。英国中东欧社区(UK-CEE)不成比例地面临着身心健康不良的社会决定因素的影响。他们的健康和医疗保健观念仍然研究不足,尤其是在初级保健方面。
本综述探讨了 UK-CEE 社区成员对英国普通科医生的使用和看法。
系统搜索了九个书目数据库,共确定了 2094 篇符合搜索标准的出版物。灰色文献搜索确定了另外 16 篇相关出版物。通过标题和摘要筛选出 201 篇相关出版物,经过全文筛选后减少到 65 篇。对出版物进行了批判性评估,并提取和编码了数据。使用恒定比较的主题分析生成了更高阶的主题结构。
实现了对整个 UK-CEE 社区的全面代表性。描述了相对较低的 GP 注册率,个人社区成员的文化和社会人口因素的相互作用决定了他们使用 GP 服务的能力、愿望和需求。克服获取和咨询障碍的困难很常见,健康期望经常得不到满足。对普通科医生的不信任和不满往往仍然存在,促进了包括跨国医疗保健在内的替代寻求健康的方法。边缘化的 UK-CEE 社区亚组,包括罗姆人、被贩卖者和无家可归者,与 GP 的接触和结果特别差。仅确定了有限的关于英国脱欧和 COVID-19 影响的数据。
综述结果表明,需要设计联合方法来消除参与障碍,对 GP 护理进行文化适应并建立信任,以满足 UK-CEE 个人的需求。
社区成员和利益相关者塑造了审查问题的概念化和新兴主题的验证。