Psychosocial Responses to Healthcare: A Study on Asylum-Seeking Families' Experiences in Denmark
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Psychosocial Responses to Healthcare : A Study on Asylum-Seeking Families' Experiences in Denmark. / Barghadouch, Amina; Norredam, Marie.
I: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, Bind 24, 2022, s. 551–555.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Psychosocial Responses to Healthcare
T2 - A Study on Asylum-Seeking Families' Experiences in Denmark
AU - Barghadouch, Amina
AU - Norredam, Marie
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Much work has gone into unpacking the range of individual, interpersonal and structural barriers that prevent asylum-seekers from accessing healthcare. In this Brief Communication, we disentangle asylum-seeking families' psychosocial responses when accessing healthcare as crucial dimensions of the access experience. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 11 asylum-seeking families in Denmark, we present examples from three specific healthcare encounters between families and healthcare professionals in the Danish asylum system. We demonstrate how unfamiliarity with the healthcare system, interpersonal miscommunication and cultural insensitivity among professionals evoke specific emotions that undermine participants' trust in the healthcare system and affect their future motivation for healthcare seeking and ultimately also their healthcare seeking behavior. We argue for an urgent need to recognize the pivotal role of such psychosocial responses in shaping healthcare access for asylum-seeking families. Focusing on these responses is an important next step in overcoming barriers in access to healthcare, which have been described in literature for years.
AB - Much work has gone into unpacking the range of individual, interpersonal and structural barriers that prevent asylum-seekers from accessing healthcare. In this Brief Communication, we disentangle asylum-seeking families' psychosocial responses when accessing healthcare as crucial dimensions of the access experience. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 11 asylum-seeking families in Denmark, we present examples from three specific healthcare encounters between families and healthcare professionals in the Danish asylum system. We demonstrate how unfamiliarity with the healthcare system, interpersonal miscommunication and cultural insensitivity among professionals evoke specific emotions that undermine participants' trust in the healthcare system and affect their future motivation for healthcare seeking and ultimately also their healthcare seeking behavior. We argue for an urgent need to recognize the pivotal role of such psychosocial responses in shaping healthcare access for asylum-seeking families. Focusing on these responses is an important next step in overcoming barriers in access to healthcare, which have been described in literature for years.
KW - Asylum-seeking families
KW - Access to healthcare
KW - Healthcare navigation
KW - Psychosocial responses
KW - Semi-structured interviews
KW - Denmark
U2 - 10.1007/s10903-021-01183-x
DO - 10.1007/s10903-021-01183-x
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 33759026
VL - 24
SP - 551
EP - 555
JO - Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
JF - Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
SN - 1557-1912
ER -
ID: 259718866