Elnakib Shatha, Akhu-Zaheya Laila, Khater Wejdan, Bou-Karroum Lama, Honein-AbouHaidar Gladys, Salameh Sabine, Shawar Yusra Ribhi, Spiegel Paul
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Faculty of Nursing, Jordan University of Science and Technology, Irbid, Jordan.
Confl Health. 2024 Apr 15;18(Suppl 1):30. doi: 10.1186/s13031-024-00588-3.
The prolonged presence of Syrian refugees in Jordan has highlighted the need for sustainable health service delivery models for refugees. In 2012, the Jordanian government adopted a policy that granted Syrian refugees access, free of charge, to the national health system. However since 2012, successive policy revisions have limited refugee access. This paper seeks to understand factors that initially put refugee integration into the health system on the policy agenda, as well as how these same factors later affected commitment to sustain the policy.
This paper draws on data from a document review of 197 peer-reviewed and grey literature publications, a media analysis of newspaper articles retrieved from four officially recognized newspapers in Jordan, and 33 semi-structured key informant interviews. We used Kingdon's Multiple Streams Model - a well-established tool for analyzing policy adoption - to understand how political priority developed for integration of refugees into the health system.
We find that several factors helped bring attention to the issue, namely concerns over infectious disease transmission to host communities, high rates of chronic conditions among the refugee population and the increasingly urban and dispersed nature of refugees. At the outset of the conflict, the national mood was receptive to refugees. Politicians and government officials quickly recognized the crisis as an opportunity to secure material and technical support from the international humanitarian community. At the same time, global pressures for integrating refugees into national health systems helped move the integration agenda forward in Jordan and the region more broadly. Since 2012, there were several modifications to the policy that signal profound changes in national views around the continued presence of Syrian refugees in the country, as well as reduced external financial support which has undermined the sustainability of the policy.
This case study underscores the dynamic nature of policymaking and the challenge of sustaining government commitment to the right to health among refugees. Our analysis has important implications for advocates seeking to advance and maintain momentum for the integration of refugees into national health systems.
叙利亚难民在约旦的长期存在凸显了为难民提供可持续医疗服务模式的必要性。2012年,约旦政府通过了一项政策,允许叙利亚难民免费使用国家医疗系统。然而,自2012年以来,一系列政策修订限制了难民的就医机会。本文旨在了解最初将难民融入医疗系统提上政策议程的因素,以及这些因素后来如何影响维持该政策的决心。
本文借鉴了对197篇同行评审和灰色文献出版物的文献综述数据、对从约旦四家官方认可报纸上检索到的报纸文章的媒体分析,以及33次半结构化关键信息人访谈。我们使用金登的多源流模型——一种成熟的政策采纳分析工具——来理解为难民融入医疗系统确立政治优先级的过程。
我们发现,几个因素促使该问题受到关注,即担心传染病传播到收容社区、难民群体中慢性病发病率高以及难民日益城市化和分散的特性。冲突伊始,国民情绪对难民持接纳态度。政治家和政府官员很快将这场危机视为从国际人道主义社会获得物质和技术支持的契机。与此同时,将难民融入国家医疗系统的全球压力有助于推动约旦乃至更广泛地区的融合议程。自2012年以来,该政策有多项修改,这表明该国对叙利亚难民持续留驻的国家观点发生了深刻变化,同时外部财政支持减少,这削弱了该政策的可持续性。
本案例研究强调了决策的动态性质以及维持政府对难民健康权承诺的挑战。我们的分析对寻求推动并保持难民融入国家医疗系统势头的倡导者具有重要意义。