Canadian Journal of Public Health
Volume 102, Issue 4, 2011, Pages 286-290

Refugee claimant women and barriers to health and social services post-birth (Article)

Merry L.A. , Gagnon A.J. , Kalim N. , Bouris S.S.
  • a Department of Nursing, McGill University, 2155 Guy St, Suite 400-7, Montréal, QC H3H 2R9, Canada
  • b Department of Nursing, McGill University, 2155 Guy St, Suite 400-7, Montréal, QC H3H 2R9, Canada, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada
  • c St. Mary's Hospital, Montreal, QC, Canada
  • d Department of Nursing, McGill University, 2155 Guy St, Suite 400-7, Montréal, QC H3H 2R9, Canada

Abstract

Objectives: Access to services for international migrants living in Canada is especially important during the postpartum period when additional health services and support are key to maternal and infant health. Recent studies found refugee claimant women to have a high number of postpartum health and social concerns that were not being addressed by the Canadian health care system. The current project aimed to gain greater understanding of the barriers these vulnerable migrant women face in accessing health and social services postpartum. Methods: Qualitative text data on services that claimant women received post-birth and notes (recorded by research nurses) about their experiences in accessing and receiving services were examined. Thematic analysis was conducted to identify common themes related to access barriers. Results: Of particular concern were the refusal of care for infants of mothers covered under IFHP, maternal isolation and difficulty for public health nurses to reach women postpartum. Also problematic was the lack of assessment, support and referrals for psychosocial concerns. Conclusions: Better screening and referral for high-risk claimant women and education of health care providers on claimants' coverage and eligibility for services may improve the addressing of health and social concerns. Expansion of claimants' health benefits to include psychotherapy without prior approval by Citizenship and Immigration Canada is also recommended. Interventions aimed at social determinants underlying health care access issues among childbearing refugee claimants should also be explored. These might include providing access to subsidized language courses, social housing and government-sponsored benefits for parents, which currently have restrictive eligibility that limits or excludes claimants' access. © Canadian Public Health Association, 2011.

Author Keywords

Emigration and immigration Refugees access to health care postpartum women

Index Keywords

prospective study educational status refugee multicenter study clinical trial Prospective Studies human Refugees statistics social support language Social Work income Humans Canada female Mothers Article mother adult social class health literacy Postpartum Period puerperium Health Services Accessibility health care delivery

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79961177833&partnerID=40&md5=c13019cfbc95d795d5138b491e29ea6d

ISSN: 00084263
Cited by: 38
Original Language: English