Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Postdoctoral Researcher at Department of Interdisciplinary health research, Faculty of Medicine and Associate Professor at Department of Criminology and Sociology of Law, Faculty of Law, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Scand J Prim Health Care. 2024 Dec;42(4):723-737. doi: 10.1080/02813432.2024.2404054. Epub 2024 Sep 13.
According to the UN Committee Against Torture, all state parties to the Torture Convention have a responsibility to meet the rehabilitation needs of torture victims who have sought asylum within their borders. General practitioners (GPs) can play a crucial role in identifying torture victims and securing rehabilitation when needed. There is a pressing knowledge gap on the knowledge and practices of GPs vis-à-vis potentially tortured patients, and an urgent need for research that investigates GPs' practices of identification, referral, and rehabilitation - in Norway and beyond. This article presents an exploratory qualitative pilot study that investigates the experiences of GPs in Oslo vis-à-vis this patient group.
Semi-structured interviews with five experienced GPs in the greater Oslo area. Interview data was analyzed through thematic analysis and discussed within a theoretical framework seeing GPs as street-level bureaucrats.
Issues that emerged in the pilot involve a consistent professional confidence and a particular concern for victims of sexual violence and sexualized torture. The pilot also found a troubling commonsensical reasoning about identification in the asylum process. The GPs asked for the re-establishment of specialist rehabilitation centers for refugees and torture victims to consult in case of need. Alas, the study also confirmed that GPs are a difficult profession to recruit for research.
This study indicates that GPs are important actors in terms of identifying torture victims after resettlement, but that there are shortcomings in their training and knowledge, in the overall organization of the healthcare system, and in specialized healthcare, that limit prospects for rehabilitation.
根据联合国禁止酷刑委员会的规定,《禁止酷刑公约》的所有缔约国都有责任满足在其境内寻求庇护的酷刑受害者的康复需求。全科医生(GP)在识别酷刑受害者和在需要时确保康复方面可以发挥关键作用。目前,关于全科医生在识别潜在受酷刑者方面的知识和实践存在紧迫的知识差距,迫切需要研究挪威乃至其他国家的全科医生在识别、转介和康复方面的实践。本文介绍了一项探索性的定性试点研究,该研究调查了奥斯陆的全科医生对这一患者群体的经验。
对奥斯陆大都市区的五名经验丰富的全科医生进行半结构化访谈。通过主题分析对访谈数据进行分析,并在将全科医生视为街头官僚的理论框架内进行讨论。
试点中出现的问题涉及一致的专业信心,以及对性暴力和性化酷刑受害者的特别关注。试点还发现了一种令人不安的常识性推理,即识别庇护程序中的问题。全科医生要求为难民和酷刑受害者重新建立专门的康复中心,以备不时之需。然而,该研究还证实,全科医生是一个难以招募参与研究的职业。
本研究表明,全科医生在重新安置后识别酷刑受害者方面是重要的参与者,但他们在培训和知识、医疗保健系统的整体组织以及专业医疗保健方面存在不足,这限制了康复的前景。