Vaccination needs and use of preventive healthcare services among undocumented migrant children in Denmark

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clara B. Parellada ◽  
Mathilde C. Boye ◽  
Marie Louise Norredam
2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (10) ◽  
pp. 1387-1398
Author(s):  
Kenzie Latham-Mintus ◽  
Ashley Vowels ◽  
Swapnali Chavan

Objectives: This research examines whether perceived neighborhood disorder influences the use of preventive healthcare services (i.e. influenza vaccine, pneumonia vaccine, cholesterol screening, colonoscopy, and dental care) by older adults and whether social ties buffer the potential adverse effects of perceived neighborhood disorder. Methods: Using data from the 2012 wave of the Health and Retirement Study, binary logistic regression was used to generate odds ratio estimates of preventive healthcare use in the past 2 years. Results: We find that greater levels of neighborhood disorder were associated with fewer dental care visits net of social and health factors. Regular participation in four or more social activities was associated with decreased odds of restricted use and increased odds of receiving a pneumonia vaccine and colonoscopy. Discussion: This research provides evidence that perceived neighborhood disorder may act as a barrier for specific preventive healthcare services and highlights the need for targeted intervention.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 417-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annie-Laurie McRee ◽  
Amy L. Gower ◽  
Paul L. Reiter

2019 ◽  
Vol 104 (8) ◽  
pp. 722-724 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neal James Russell ◽  
Lisa Murphy ◽  
Laura Nellums ◽  
Jonathan Broad ◽  
Sarah Boutros ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 1809
Author(s):  
Ali A. Al Jumaili ◽  
Kawther K. Ahmed ◽  
Dave Koch

Objective: To identify barriers to healthcare access, to assess the health literacy levels of the foreign-born Arabic speaking population in Iowa, USA and to measure their prevalence of seeking preventive healthcare services. Methods: A cross-sectional study of native Arabic speaking adults involved a focus group and an anonymous paper-based survey. The focus group and the Andersen Model were used to develop the survey questionnaire. The survey participants were customers at Arabic grocery stores, worshippers at the city mosque and patients at free University Clinic. Chi-square test was used to measure the relationship between the characteristics of survey participants and preventive healthcare services. Thematic analysis was used to analyze the focus group transcript. Results: We received 196 completed surveys. Only half of the participants were considered to have good health literacy. More than one-third of the participants had no health insurance and less than half of them visit clinics regularly for preventive measures. Two participant enabling factors (health insurance and residency years) and one need factor (having chronic disease(s)) were found to significantly influence preventive physician visits. Conclusions: This theory-based study provides a tool that can be used in different Western countries where Arabic minority lives. Both the survey and the focus group agreed that lacking health insurance is the main barrier facing their access to healthcare services. The availability of an interpreter in the hospital is essential to help those with inadequate health literacy, particularly new arriving individuals. More free healthcare settings are needed in the county to take care of the increasing number of uninsured Arabic speaking patients.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S873-S873
Author(s):  
Terese Sara Hoej Joergensen ◽  
Heather Allore ◽  
Corey Nagel ◽  
Ana R Quiñones

Abstract Introduction: Older adults experience multiple health problems necessitating medical care. However, studies have shown that healthcare is not equally accessible for older adults in the US. In 2011, Medicare introduced Annual Wellness Visits to improve access to preventive healthcare including influenza vaccination. Objectives: Ascertain whether sociodemographic factors, multimorbidity, and other health indicators pose a barrier for older adults to access Annual Wellness Visits and influenza vaccination. Methods: We analyzed data from the 2012 and 2014 waves of the Health and Retirement Study linked with Medicare records. 4,858 older adults aged 65+ years were included in Conditional Random Forests to identify the most important predictors of Annual Wellness Visits and influenza vaccination during this two-year period. The predictors included: age, sex, race/ethnicity, partnered, geographical region, wealth, educational level, Medicaid coverage, body mass index, activities and instrumental activities of daily living, proxy interview, cognitive impairment, dementia diagnosis, and multimorbidity. Results: In total, 1,142 (23.6%) older adults had an Annual Wellness Visit and 3,316 (68.4%) older adults received an influenza vaccination. 11.9% were non-Hispanic black, 6.3% were Hispanic, with a median of 6 chronic conditions and 16.9% had dementia. The most important predictors of Annual Wellness Visits were region, wealth, dementia diagnosis, and race/ethnicity. The most important predictors of influenza vaccination were multimorbidity, race/ethnicity, educational level, and wealth. Conclusion: The importance of geographical region for Annual Wellness Visits suggests that the service has not been adopted equally throughout the US, whereas multimorbidity is the most important factor for receiving influenza vaccination.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6101-6101
Author(s):  
J. K. Carroll ◽  
R. Epstein ◽  
K. Fiscella ◽  
E. Volpe ◽  
P. Jean-Pierre ◽  
...  

6101 Background: Previous work has shown that refugee women do not receive adequate preventive healthcare services, especially cancer screening. To identify factors that could affect the provision of cancer screening services to African Somali refugee women living in Rochester, NY, we assessed beliefs these women have about health promotion, access to care and use of preventive healthcare services. Methods: Individual in-depth interviews were conducted on a community-based sample of 34 resettled Somali-born women who were older than 18 years. Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. A professional interpreter listened to all audiotaped interviews to check accuracy of transcription and translation. Content was analyzed by a multidisciplinary team using a grounded theory approach. Results: Median age of the women was 27 years. Length of residence in US was two months to nine years. For these women, health maintenance for acute survival took precedence over long-term prevention of disease. All women were familiar with basic health promotion practices, immunizations and routine medical examinations, and participants used both US-based and traditional techniques to prevent illness. Most women (71%, n=24), recognized the importance of maintaining good hygiene (59%, n=20) understood the need to have an adequate source of safe food and water, (74%, n=25) saw the need for access to a regular source of healthcare and (65%, n=22) acknowledged the need to function well at home. Few women understood cancer prevention services. Only three (9%) women recognized that the purpose of the Papanicalaou test was to screen for cervical cancer. Only six women (18%) recognized mammography (either the term or the procedure) and all of them were English-speaking, had lived in the US five years or longer, and had worked in the healthcare field. Conclusions: While traditional beliefs about health promotion did not appear to impede delivery of most preventive services, and participants understood prevention of infectious disease, their familiarity with cancer and cancer screening services was poor. Future health promotion programs need to increase refugee women’s knowledge about these services while building on other positive health-promoting beliefs. Supported by AHRQ 5R03HS014105 and NCI 1R25CA102618 No significant financial relationships to disclose.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. e0193219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zohar Mor ◽  
Anat Amit Aharon ◽  
Rivka Sheffer ◽  
Haim Nehama

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