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Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice

BACKGROUND: Refugees and asylum seekers arrive in the Australian community with complex health needs and expectations of healthcare systems formed from elsewhere. Navigating the primary healthcare system can be challenging with communication and language barriers. In multicultural societies, this ob...

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Autores principales: Patel, Pinika, Muscat, Danielle M., Trevena, Lyndal, Zachariah, Dipti, Nosir, Hanaa, Jesurasa, Nishanthie, Hadi, Amina, Bernays, Sarah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8957721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34951092
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13411
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author Patel, Pinika
Muscat, Danielle M.
Trevena, Lyndal
Zachariah, Dipti
Nosir, Hanaa
Jesurasa, Nishanthie
Hadi, Amina
Bernays, Sarah
author_facet Patel, Pinika
Muscat, Danielle M.
Trevena, Lyndal
Zachariah, Dipti
Nosir, Hanaa
Jesurasa, Nishanthie
Hadi, Amina
Bernays, Sarah
author_sort Patel, Pinika
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Refugees and asylum seekers arrive in the Australian community with complex health needs and expectations of healthcare systems formed from elsewhere. Navigating the primary healthcare system can be challenging with communication and language barriers. In multicultural societies, this obstacle may be removed by accessing language‐concordant care. Emerging evidence suggests language‐concordance is associated with more positive reports of patient experience. Whether this is true for refugees and asylum seekers and their expectation of markers of quality patient‐centred care (PCC) remains to be explored. This study aimed to explore the expectations around the markers of PCC and the impacts of having language‐concordant care in Australian primary healthcare. METHODS: We conducted semi‐structured individual in‐language (Arabic, Dari, and Tamil) remote interviews with 22 refugee and asylum seekers and 9 general practitioners (GPs). Interview transcripts were coded inductively and deductively, based on the research questions, using Thematic Analysis. Extensive debriefing and discussion took place within the research team throughout data collection and analysis. RESULTS: Community member expectations of markers of PCC are constantly evolving and adapting based on invisible and visible actions during clinical encounters. Challenges can occur in the clinical encounter when expectations are ‘unsaid’ or unarticulated by both community members and GPs due to the assumption of shared understanding with language concordant care. Expectations of what constitutes satisfactory, quality PCC are dynamic outcomes, which are influenced by prior and current experiences of healthcare. CONCLUSION: This study highlights the importance of understanding that language concordant care does not always support aligned expectations of the markers of quality PCC between community members and their GP. We recommend that GPs encourage community members to provide explicit descriptions about how their prior experiences have framed their expectations of what characterizes quality PCC. In addition, GPs could develop a collaborative approach, in which they explain their own decision‐making processes in providing PCC to refugees and asylum seekers. PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: Bilingual researchers from multicultural backgrounds and experience working with people from refugee backgrounds were consulted on study design and analysis. This study included individuals with lived experiences as refugees and asylum seekers and clinicians as participants.
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spelling pubmed-89577212022-04-01 Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice Patel, Pinika Muscat, Danielle M. Trevena, Lyndal Zachariah, Dipti Nosir, Hanaa Jesurasa, Nishanthie Hadi, Amina Bernays, Sarah Health Expect Regular Issue Papers BACKGROUND: Refugees and asylum seekers arrive in the Australian community with complex health needs and expectations of healthcare systems formed from elsewhere. Navigating the primary healthcare system can be challenging with communication and language barriers. In multicultural societies, this obstacle may be removed by accessing language‐concordant care. Emerging evidence suggests language‐concordance is associated with more positive reports of patient experience. Whether this is true for refugees and asylum seekers and their expectation of markers of quality patient‐centred care (PCC) remains to be explored. This study aimed to explore the expectations around the markers of PCC and the impacts of having language‐concordant care in Australian primary healthcare. METHODS: We conducted semi‐structured individual in‐language (Arabic, Dari, and Tamil) remote interviews with 22 refugee and asylum seekers and 9 general practitioners (GPs). Interview transcripts were coded inductively and deductively, based on the research questions, using Thematic Analysis. Extensive debriefing and discussion took place within the research team throughout data collection and analysis. RESULTS: Community member expectations of markers of PCC are constantly evolving and adapting based on invisible and visible actions during clinical encounters. Challenges can occur in the clinical encounter when expectations are ‘unsaid’ or unarticulated by both community members and GPs due to the assumption of shared understanding with language concordant care. Expectations of what constitutes satisfactory, quality PCC are dynamic outcomes, which are influenced by prior and current experiences of healthcare. CONCLUSION: This study highlights the importance of understanding that language concordant care does not always support aligned expectations of the markers of quality PCC between community members and their GP. We recommend that GPs encourage community members to provide explicit descriptions about how their prior experiences have framed their expectations of what characterizes quality PCC. In addition, GPs could develop a collaborative approach, in which they explain their own decision‐making processes in providing PCC to refugees and asylum seekers. PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: Bilingual researchers from multicultural backgrounds and experience working with people from refugee backgrounds were consulted on study design and analysis. This study included individuals with lived experiences as refugees and asylum seekers and clinicians as participants. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-12-23 2022-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8957721/ /pubmed/34951092 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13411 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Health Expectations published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Regular Issue Papers
Patel, Pinika
Muscat, Danielle M.
Trevena, Lyndal
Zachariah, Dipti
Nosir, Hanaa
Jesurasa, Nishanthie
Hadi, Amina
Bernays, Sarah
Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
title Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
title_full Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
title_fullStr Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
title_short Exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
title_sort exploring the expectations, experiences and tensions of refugee patients and general practitioners in the quality of care in general practice
topic Regular Issue Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8957721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34951092
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13411
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