International Journal of STD and AIDS
Volume 15, Issue 8, 2004, Pages 515-518

What are the needs of asylum seekers attending an STI clinic and are they significantly different from those of British patients? (Article)

Rogstad K.E.* , Dale H.
  • a Department of Genitourinary Medicine, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield S10 2JF, United Kingdom
  • b Univ. of Sheffield Medical School, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield S10 2JF, United Kingdom

Abstract

To elicit the needs of asylum seekers attending the Royal Hallamshire genitourinary medicine clinic for the first time in 2002 and whether these differed from British patients, a search of patient records for 2002 identified 43 asylum seekers (21 female, 22 male) who were paired with 43 British patients matched by age and sex (mean age 27.9, range 15-56). The needs of the patients were ascertained by retrieving answers to predetermined questions from the paper records. Asylum seekers had 166 appointments while British patients had 113 (P = 0.091) and 21 DNAs (did not attend appointment), compared with seven British DNAs (P = 0.071). Twenty-eight asylum seekers and no British patients needed an interpreter (P < 0.01). Five of the 18 eligible asylum seeker females had an up-to-date smear compared with 13 British females (P = 0.008). Nineteen asylum seekers reported sexual violence compared with none of the British patients (P < 0.011); 15 of these asylum seekers were receiving/ had requested counselling. There was no significant difference in the numbers of pregnant women, commercial sex workers and intravenous drug users, and patients reporting a previous history of sexually transmitted infection. There are some differences between the needs of asylum seekers and British patients; the most noticeable are the use of interpreters, the reporting of sexual violence, the need for counselling and the number of women without up-to-date smears. A larger study may highlight more differences.

Author Keywords

Sexual assault Cytology Asylum Sexually transmitted infections HIV

Index Keywords

immigrant urogenital tract disease sexual behavior patient scheduling sex allocation race difference human middle aged controlled study priority journal State Medicine urology Health Services Needs and Demand sexually transmitted disease Sexually Transmitted Diseases patient counseling Humans Adolescent Medical Records male England female Africa Ambulatory Care Facilities Article disease transmission Retrospective Studies Questionnaires adult major clinical study drug use patient attitude Emigration and Immigration pregnant woman Patient Acceptance of Health Care hospital management health care facility sexual crime smear health care need

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-4344647309&doi=10.1258%2f0956462041558230&partnerID=40&md5=81445da646c13943b8f6a001dfb9df5b

DOI: 10.1258/0956462041558230
ISSN: 09564624
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English