School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Aligning Health Needs & Evidence for Transformative Change: An Affiliated Centre of the Joanna Briggs Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada.
PLoS One. 2024 Nov 7;19(11):e0312746. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312746. eCollection 2024.
Refugee and asylum-seeking women are known to experience a myriad of intersecting sociocultural, institutional, and systemic barriers when accessing healthcare services after resettlement in high-income countries. Barriers can negatively affect service uptake and engagement, contributing to health inequities and forgone care. Access to sexual and reproductive healthcare (e.g., family planning, cervical cancer prevention) has largely been understudied. This scoping review sought to: i) examine the use of sexual and reproductive health services among refugee and asylum-seeking women in high-income countries; and ii) identify barriers and facilitators influencing access to sexual and reproductive healthcare for refugee and asylum-seeking women in high-income countries.
This review was conducted in accordance with Joanna Briggs Institute Methodology for Scoping Reviews. Ten databases (e.g., CINAHL, MEDLINE, Embase) were searched for qualitative, quantitative, mixed method studies, and gray literature published anytime before February 2024 across high-income countries (defined by the World Bank). The Health Behaviour Model was used to examine and understand factors influencing service use and access.
3,997 titles and abstracts were screened, with 66 empirical studies included. Most were conducted in the United States (44%), Australia (25%), Europe (18%) and elsewhere and were qualitative (68%). Papers largely addressed contraception, abortion, cervical cancer screening, gender-based violence, and sexual health education. Included studies indicated that refugee and asylum-seeking women in high-income countries face a greater unmet need for contraception, higher use of abortion care, and lower engagement with cervical cancer screening, all when compared to women born in the resettlement country. Frequently reported barriers included differences in health literacy, shame and stigma around sexual health, language and communication challenges, racial or xenophobic interactions with healthcare providers, and healthcare/medication costs.
Studies across the globe identified consistent empirical evidence demonstrating health inequities facing refugee and asylum-seeking and myriad intersecting barriers contributing to underuse of essential sexual and reproductive health services. Facilitators included multilingual healthcare provider, use of interpreters and interpretation services, community health promotion work shops, and financial aid/Medicare.
难民和寻求庇护的妇女在高收入国家重新安置后,在获得医疗服务时,已知会面临众多相互交织的社会文化、制度和系统性障碍。这些障碍会对服务的接受和参与产生负面影响,导致健康不平等和错失治疗机会。获得性和生殖健康保健(例如计划生育、宫颈癌预防)的情况在很大程度上研究不足。本范围综述旨在:i)研究高收入国家难民和寻求庇护妇女使用性和生殖健康服务的情况;ii)确定影响高收入国家难民和寻求庇护妇女获得性和生殖保健的障碍和促进因素。
本综述是根据 Joanna Briggs 研究所的范围综述方法进行的。在高收入国家(由世界银行定义),从任何时候到 2024 年 2 月之前,在 10 个数据库(例如 CINAHL、MEDLINE、Embase)中搜索定性、定量、混合方法研究和灰色文献。使用健康行为模型来检查和理解影响服务使用和获取的因素。
筛选了 3997 篇标题和摘要,纳入了 66 项实证研究。其中大部分研究在美国(44%)、澳大利亚(25%)、欧洲(18%)和其他地方进行,并且是定性研究(68%)。论文主要涉及避孕、堕胎、宫颈癌筛查、基于性别的暴力和性健康教育。纳入的研究表明,与出生在重新安置国家的妇女相比,高收入国家的难民和寻求庇护妇女对避孕的需求更大,堕胎护理的使用率更高,而对宫颈癌筛查的参与度更低。经常报告的障碍包括健康素养差异、对性健康的羞耻和耻辱感、语言和沟通挑战、与医疗保健提供者的种族或仇外互动以及医疗保健/药物费用。
全球的研究都一致证明了难民和寻求庇护妇女面临着健康不平等的问题,并且存在众多相互交织的障碍,导致基本性和生殖健康服务的使用不足。促进因素包括多语言医疗保健提供者、使用口译员和口译服务、社区健康促进工作坊以及经济援助/医疗保险。