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Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND

To date, the integration of refugees in German health surveys is insufficient. The survey RESPOND (Improving regional health system responses to the challenges of forced migration) aimed to collect valid epidemiological data on refugee health status and healthcare provision. The core elements of the...

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Autores principales: Biddle, Louise, Hintermeier, Maren, Mohsenpour, Amir, Sand, Matthias, Bozorgmehr, Kayvan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Robert Koch Institute 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8734199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35146304
http://dx.doi.org/10.25646/7863
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author Biddle, Louise
Hintermeier, Maren
Mohsenpour, Amir
Sand, Matthias
Bozorgmehr, Kayvan
author_facet Biddle, Louise
Hintermeier, Maren
Mohsenpour, Amir
Sand, Matthias
Bozorgmehr, Kayvan
author_sort Biddle, Louise
collection PubMed
description To date, the integration of refugees in German health surveys is insufficient. The survey RESPOND (Improving regional health system responses to the challenges of forced migration) aimed to collect valid epidemiological data on refugee health status and healthcare provision. The core elements of the survey consisted of a population-based sampling procedure in Baden-Württemberg, multilingual questionnaires and a face-to-face approach of recruitment and data collection in collective accommodation centres with multilingual field teams. In addition, data on the geographical locations of accommodation centres and their structural quality were obtained. The results indicate a high overall health burden. The prevalence of depression (44.3%) and anxiety symptoms (43.0%) was high. At the same time, high unmet needs were reported for primary (30.5%) and specialist (30.9%) care. Despite sufficient geographical accessibility of primary care services, frequent ambulatory care sensitive hospitalisations, i.e. hospitalisations that could potentially have been avoided through primary care (25.3%), as well as subjective deficits in the quality of care, suggest barriers to accessing healthcare services. Almost half of all refugees (45.3%) live in accommodation facilities of poor structural quality. Collecting valid data on the health situation of refugees is possible through a combination of targeted sampling, multilingual recruitment and survey instruments as well as personal recruitment. The presented approach could complement established procedures for conducting health surveys and be extended to other federal states.
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spelling pubmed-87341992022-02-09 Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND Biddle, Louise Hintermeier, Maren Mohsenpour, Amir Sand, Matthias Bozorgmehr, Kayvan J Health Monit Focus To date, the integration of refugees in German health surveys is insufficient. The survey RESPOND (Improving regional health system responses to the challenges of forced migration) aimed to collect valid epidemiological data on refugee health status and healthcare provision. The core elements of the survey consisted of a population-based sampling procedure in Baden-Württemberg, multilingual questionnaires and a face-to-face approach of recruitment and data collection in collective accommodation centres with multilingual field teams. In addition, data on the geographical locations of accommodation centres and their structural quality were obtained. The results indicate a high overall health burden. The prevalence of depression (44.3%) and anxiety symptoms (43.0%) was high. At the same time, high unmet needs were reported for primary (30.5%) and specialist (30.9%) care. Despite sufficient geographical accessibility of primary care services, frequent ambulatory care sensitive hospitalisations, i.e. hospitalisations that could potentially have been avoided through primary care (25.3%), as well as subjective deficits in the quality of care, suggest barriers to accessing healthcare services. Almost half of all refugees (45.3%) live in accommodation facilities of poor structural quality. Collecting valid data on the health situation of refugees is possible through a combination of targeted sampling, multilingual recruitment and survey instruments as well as personal recruitment. The presented approach could complement established procedures for conducting health surveys and be extended to other federal states. Robert Koch Institute 2021-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8734199/ /pubmed/35146304 http://dx.doi.org/10.25646/7863 Text en © Robert Koch Institute. All rights reserved unless explicitly granted. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Focus
Biddle, Louise
Hintermeier, Maren
Mohsenpour, Amir
Sand, Matthias
Bozorgmehr, Kayvan
Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND
title Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND
title_full Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND
title_fullStr Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND
title_short Monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: Results of the population-based survey RESPOND
title_sort monitoring the health and healthcare provision for refugees in collective accommodation centres: results of the population-based survey respond
topic Focus
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8734199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35146304
http://dx.doi.org/10.25646/7863
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