Department of Community Health and Prevention, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
The Philadelphia AIDS Consortium, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Aug 30;22(1):1645. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-14066-z.
Latino populations in the United States are disproportionately affected by substance use, HIV/AIDS, violence, and mental health issues (SAVAME). A growing body of evidence demonstrates the syndemic nature of SAVAME and the need for integrated strategies to reduce their impact. This study sought to understand the network of SAVAME services for Latino immigrants in Philadelphia to inform future interventions for SAVAME prevention and mitigation.
Key informant interviews (N = 30) were conducted with providers working in Latino-serving organizations providing SAVAME services. Interviews were analyzed using thematic coding and grounded theory.
Latino-serving providers perceived a large need for, and important limitations in the availability, accessibility, and adequacy of SAVAME services for Latino immigrants. Gaps were seen as especially acute for mental health and substance use services, partly because of insufficient funding for these services. Latino immigrants' lack of health insurance, immigration status, limited English proficiency (LEP), stigma surrounding SAVAME issues, and limited knowledge of available services were identified as significant barriers preventing access to services. Providers noted that scarcity of well-trained, culturally competent, and ethnically concordant providers reduced the adequacy of SAVAME services for Latino immigrant clients. The small size, low levels of infrastructure, and limited capacity were reported as additional factors limiting the ability of many Latino-serving organizations to adopt a syndemic approach in the prevention and treatment of SAVAME services.
The results call for changes in the structure of funding streams and communitywide strategies to foster collaboration across SAVAME providers working with Latino immigrant clients.
美国的拉丁裔人群不成比例地受到物质使用、艾滋病毒/艾滋病、暴力和心理健康问题(SAVAME)的影响。越来越多的证据表明 SAVAME 具有综合征性质,需要采取综合策略来减少其影响。本研究旨在了解费城拉丁裔移民 SAVAME 服务网络,为 SAVAME 预防和缓解的未来干预措施提供信息。
对为提供 SAVAME 服务的服务拉丁裔人群的组织工作的提供者进行了 30 名关键知情人访谈。使用主题编码和扎根理论对访谈进行了分析。
拉丁裔服务提供者认为,拉丁裔移民对 SAVAME 服务的需求很大,但可用性、可及性和充分性方面存在重要限制。在心理健康和物质使用服务方面,差距被认为尤其严重,部分原因是这些服务资金不足。缺乏医疗保险、移民身份、英语水平有限(LEP)、围绕 SAVAME 问题的污名化以及对可用服务的了解有限被确定为阻止获得服务的重大障碍。提供者指出,受过良好培训、文化上有能力和种族上一致的提供者稀缺,降低了 SAVAME 服务对拉丁裔移民客户的充分性。规模小、基础设施水平低和能力有限被认为是许多拉丁裔服务组织在预防和治疗 SAVAME 服务方面采用综合征方法的能力的其他限制因素。
研究结果呼吁改变资金流的结构和全社区战略,以促进与拉丁裔移民客户合作的 SAVAME 提供者之间的合作。