Cargando…

The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol

BACKGROUND: Refugee and asylum-seeking women in Canada may have significant harmful childbearing health outcomes and unmet health and social care needs. The most vulnerable of these women are: those who have left their countries by force (e.g., war, rape or abuse histories), are separated from their...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gagnon, Anita J, Wahoush, Olive, Dougherty, Geoffrey, Saucier, Jean-François, Dennis, Cindy-Lee, Merry, Lisa, Stanger, Elizabeth, Stewart, Donna E
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1797193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17190589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-6-31
_version_ 1782132309423554560
author Gagnon, Anita J
Wahoush, Olive
Dougherty, Geoffrey
Saucier, Jean-François
Dennis, Cindy-Lee
Merry, Lisa
Stanger, Elizabeth
Stewart, Donna E
author_facet Gagnon, Anita J
Wahoush, Olive
Dougherty, Geoffrey
Saucier, Jean-François
Dennis, Cindy-Lee
Merry, Lisa
Stanger, Elizabeth
Stewart, Donna E
author_sort Gagnon, Anita J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Refugee and asylum-seeking women in Canada may have significant harmful childbearing health outcomes and unmet health and social care needs. The most vulnerable of these women are: those who have left their countries by force (e.g., war, rape or abuse histories), are separated from their families, have limited knowledge of the host country languages, and are visible minorities. Asylum-seekers face additional stresses related to their unknown future status and are marginalized with regards to access to provincial health care systems. The prevalence and severity of health issues in this population is not known nor is the extent of response from social service and health care systems (including variation in provincial service delivery). Understanding the magnitude of health and social concerns of newcomers requires data from a representative sample of childbearing refugee and asylum-seeking women resettling in Canada to permit comparisons to be made with non-refugee immigrant and Canadian-born women. Our research questions are: (1) Do refugee or asylum-seeking women and their infants, experience a greater number or a different distribution of harmful health events during pregnancy, at birth, and during the postpartum period than non-refugee immigrant or Canadian-born women? (2) Are the harmful health events experienced postpartum by asylum-seeking women and their infants, addressed less often (compared to refugees, non-refugee immigrants, and Canadian-born women) by the Canadian health care system as delivered in each of the three major receiving cities for newcomers? METHODS/DESIGN: This is a four-year multi-site prospective cohort study (pregnancy to 4 months postpartum). We will seek to recruit 2400 women [200 in each of 4 groups (refugees, asylum-seekers, non-refugee immigrants, and Canadian-born) from 1 of 12 postpartum hospital units across the 3 largest receiving cities for newcomers to Canada – Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver]. DISCUSSION: Knowledge of the extent of harmful health events occurring to asylum-seeking, refugee, immigrant, and Canadian-born women, and the response of the health care system to those events and group differences, if they exist, will inform immigration and health policy makers as well as providers of services.
format Text
id pubmed-1797193
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-17971932007-02-14 The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol Gagnon, Anita J Wahoush, Olive Dougherty, Geoffrey Saucier, Jean-François Dennis, Cindy-Lee Merry, Lisa Stanger, Elizabeth Stewart, Donna E BMC Pregnancy Childbirth Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Refugee and asylum-seeking women in Canada may have significant harmful childbearing health outcomes and unmet health and social care needs. The most vulnerable of these women are: those who have left their countries by force (e.g., war, rape or abuse histories), are separated from their families, have limited knowledge of the host country languages, and are visible minorities. Asylum-seekers face additional stresses related to their unknown future status and are marginalized with regards to access to provincial health care systems. The prevalence and severity of health issues in this population is not known nor is the extent of response from social service and health care systems (including variation in provincial service delivery). Understanding the magnitude of health and social concerns of newcomers requires data from a representative sample of childbearing refugee and asylum-seeking women resettling in Canada to permit comparisons to be made with non-refugee immigrant and Canadian-born women. Our research questions are: (1) Do refugee or asylum-seeking women and their infants, experience a greater number or a different distribution of harmful health events during pregnancy, at birth, and during the postpartum period than non-refugee immigrant or Canadian-born women? (2) Are the harmful health events experienced postpartum by asylum-seeking women and their infants, addressed less often (compared to refugees, non-refugee immigrants, and Canadian-born women) by the Canadian health care system as delivered in each of the three major receiving cities for newcomers? METHODS/DESIGN: This is a four-year multi-site prospective cohort study (pregnancy to 4 months postpartum). We will seek to recruit 2400 women [200 in each of 4 groups (refugees, asylum-seekers, non-refugee immigrants, and Canadian-born) from 1 of 12 postpartum hospital units across the 3 largest receiving cities for newcomers to Canada – Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver]. DISCUSSION: Knowledge of the extent of harmful health events occurring to asylum-seeking, refugee, immigrant, and Canadian-born women, and the response of the health care system to those events and group differences, if they exist, will inform immigration and health policy makers as well as providers of services. BioMed Central 2006-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC1797193/ /pubmed/17190589 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-6-31 Text en Copyright © 2006 Gagnon et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Gagnon, Anita J
Wahoush, Olive
Dougherty, Geoffrey
Saucier, Jean-François
Dennis, Cindy-Lee
Merry, Lisa
Stanger, Elizabeth
Stewart, Donna E
The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol
title The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol
title_full The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol
title_fullStr The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol
title_full_unstemmed The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol
title_short The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol
title_sort childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (charsnn) study protocol
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1797193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17190589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-6-31
work_keys_str_mv AT gagnonanitaj thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT wahousholive thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT doughertygeoffrey thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT saucierjeanfrancois thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT denniscindylee thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT merrylisa thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT stangerelizabeth thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT stewartdonnae thechildbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT gagnonanitaj childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT wahousholive childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT doughertygeoffrey childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT saucierjeanfrancois childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT denniscindylee childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT merrylisa childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT stangerelizabeth childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol
AT stewartdonnae childbearinghealthandrelatedserviceneedsofnewcomerscharsnnstudyprotocol