(De)Racializing Refugee Medicine

2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 829-847
Author(s):  
Michelle Munyikwa

Based on ethnographic research within refugee-serving institutions in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (USA), this paper examines the relationship between physicians and the knowledge they produce and consume about caring for refugees from around the world. I explore the “seething presence” of race in refugee medicine, a domain of medical practice whose entanglement with racial ideology and practice has been underexamined. I consider how knowledge about refugees from different groups—whether racially laden designations like “Asian” or “African” or national markers like Congolese or Burmese—circulates in clinical spaces as health-care teams diagnose and treat refugees using standards of “evidence-based” medicine. Assessing the primary literatures that refugee health-care providers use to justify varying care plans, I argue that race, while often unmentioned, structures the practice of refugee medicine. Additionally, the implicit use of race as an analytic, not racism or economic injustice, often disguises the impact of structural racism and inequality in refugee health disparities. I end with some reflections on how we might conduct a more just practice of refugee health care—and by extension, health care more generally—by shifting our gaze from the particularities of seemingly obvious cultural difference to social structure.

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (5_suppl) ◽  
pp. 76-76
Author(s):  
Sam Gaster

76 Background: The Institute of Medicine’s (IOM; 2005) seminal report, From Cancer Patient to Cancer Survivor: Lost in Transition, recommended survivorship care plans (SCPs) as a common sense approach to improve the care of cancer survivors. The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO; Mayer et al., 2014) reiterated the importance of these plans and provided strategic guidance for their implementation. The American College of Surgeons’ Commission on Cancer requires SCP delivery from accredited cancer programs as of 2015. Despite the push from these organizations, SCPs remain understudied (Mayer, Birken, Check, & Chen, 2014). The impact of SCPs on patient outcomes is poorly understood. Additionally, there is limited data on patients’ preferences for SCPs. This evaluation describes the use and assessment of SCPs at six regional cancer centers in the Midwest. Methods: Feedback was collected from 30 cancer survivors after receipt of a SCP. Responses were collected with 22-item questionnaire. Outcomes included survivors’ satisfaction with the clarity and detail of SCPs, likelihood to use SCPs in the future, intention to share SCPs with other health care providers, and perceived knowledge about treatment and follow-up care. Results: Over 75% (n = 23) of survivors agreed that SCPs were easy to understand. Ninety-three percent (n = 28) of survivors indicated that SCPs contained the right amount of information. Fifty-three percent (n = 16) of survivors are very likely to use their SCP in the future, whereas 47% (n = 14) are somewhat likely to use their SCP in the future. The majority (77%; n = 23) of survivors intend to share their SCP with another health care provider. Ninety-seven percent (n = 29) of survivors felt more knowledge about their treatment and follow-up car as a result of receiving a SCP. Conclusions: This evaluation highlights the many benefits of SCPs for cancer survivors. Results suggest that SCPs educate survivors about their treatment and follow-up care. Additionally, results indicate that many survivors intend to share SCPs, perhaps allowing for better coordination between oncology and primary care. Further research is warranted on the adoption of healthy lifestyle behaviors and receipt of routine health care after delivery of SCPs.


2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (7) ◽  
pp. 994-1005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dolores Angela Castelli Dransart

The objective of this study is to identify patterns (components and processes) of reconstruction of suicide survivors. In-depth interviews were conducted with 50 survivors of suicide in Switzerland. Data were analyzed using ATLAS.ti and according to the Grounded Theory principles. Survivors of suicide face four major challenges: dealing with the impact of suicide, searching for meaning, clarifying responsibility, and finding a personal style of reaction and coping. The various ways in which survivors fare through the specific processes of the challenges result in various patterns of reconstruction: the vulnerability, transformation, commitment, and hard blow. The unique characteristics and dynamics of each of them are highlighted. Health care providers would benefit from an approach based on the dynamics of the various patterns of reconstruction in providing appropriate support to survivors of suicide.


2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Mauldon

This paper reports on the attitudes of a sample of health care providers towards the use of telehealth to support rural patients and integrate rural primary health and urban hospital care. Telehealth and other information technologies hold the promise of improving the quality of care for people in rural and remote areas and for supporting rural primary health care providers. While seemingly beneficial for rural patients, study participants believed that telehealth remains underused and poorly integrated into their practice. In general, participants thought that telehealth is potentially beneficial but places constraints on their activities, and few actually used it. Published literature usually reports either on the success of telehealth pilot projects or initiatives that are well resourced and do not reflect the constraints of routine practice, or has an international focus limiting its relevance to the Australian context. Because of the paucity of systematic and generalisable research into the effects of the routine use of telehealth to support rural patients, it is unclear why health care professionals choose to provide such services or the costs and benefits they incur in doing so. Research and policy initiatives continue to be needed to identify the impact of telehealth within the context of Australian primary health care and to develop strategies to support its use.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 109-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederick M. Burkle ◽  
Adam L. Kushner ◽  
Christos Giannou ◽  
Mary A. Paterson ◽  
Sherry M. Wren ◽  
...  

AbstractSince 1945, the reason for humanitarian crises and the way in which the world responds to them has dramatically changed every 10 to 15 years or less. Planning, response, and recovery for these tragic events have often been ad hoc, inconsistent, and insufficient, largely because of the complexity of global humanitarian demands and their corresponding response system capabilities. This historical perspective chronicles the transformation of war and armed conflicts from the Cold War to today, emphasizing the impact these events have had on humanitarian professionals and their struggle to adapt to increasing humanitarian, operational, and political challenges. An unprecedented independent United Nations–World Health Organization decision in the Battle for Mosul in Iraq to deploy to combat zones emergency medical teams unprepared in the skills of decades-tested war and armed conflict preparation and response afforded to health care providers and dictated by International Humanitarian Law and Geneva Convention protections has abruptly challenged future decision-making and deployments. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2019;13:109–115)


2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 590-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Anne Furst ◽  
Jose A Salinas-Perez ◽  
Luis Salvador-Carulla

Objectives: Concerns raised about the appropriateness of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) in Australia for people with mental illness have not been given full weight due to a perceived lack of available evidence. In the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), one of the pilot sites of the Scheme, mental health care providers across all relevant sectors who were interviewed for a local Atlas of Mental Health Care described the impact of the scheme on their service provision. Methods: All mental health care providers from every sector in the ACT were contacted. The participation rate was 92%. We used the Description and Evaluation of Services and Directories for Long Term Care to assess all service provision at the local level. Results: Around one-third of services interviewed lacked funding stability for longer than 12 months. Nine of the 12 services who commented on the impact of the NDIS expressed deep concern over problems in planning and other issues. Conclusions: The transition to NDIS has had a major impact on ACT service providers. The ACT was a best-case scenario as it was one of the NDIS pilot sites.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2174-2174
Author(s):  
Michelle Neier ◽  
Michele P. Lambert ◽  
Rachael F. Grace ◽  
Kerry Hege ◽  
Stephanie Chiu ◽  
...  

Background: Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is an immune mediated bleeding disorder characterized by isolated thrombocytopenia. ITP can have a variety of presentations from asymptomatic to life threatening bleeding. Although childhood ITP is most often a self-resolving illness which can be closely observed without intervention, it can be associated with significant impact on quality of life (QoL). Prospective studies of QoL in ITP patients show that there is not always a correlation with treatment or disease severity. The pathway from initial presentation to final diagnosis varies and may include encounters with emergency room, primary care or specialty providers. There have been no published studies to date showing the impact of factors prior to the diagnosis of ITP on treatment decision making and QoL. Objective: To identify the role of physician-patient and physician-caregiver interactions on the QoL and emotional well-being of patients and their families. Ascertaining the impact of pre-diagnosis factors may provide an opportunity to improve access and quality of care provided. Methods: The ITP Consortium of North America (ICON) "Pathways" study was a multicenter observational prospective cohort study focused on the pathways to diagnosis of ITP. The study was supported by a Foundation for Morristown Medical Center Research Fund Grant. Subjects were included if they had presumed primary ITP and were age >12 months to <18 years. Subjects were excluded if they had secondary ITP, including Evans syndrome. Treatment was determined by the physician. Subjects were consented and presented with questionnaires to be completed at the conclusion of the initial hematology visit. The hematologist also completed survey data at that time. Survey data forms included demographic form, physician form, Peds QL Family Impact Questionnaire, Kids ITP tools (KIT) Parent Impact Report and parent proxy report, and child (patient) KIT self-report. There was a parent questionnaire which included a question about worry with a scale from 0 to 10. Study data were collected and managed using REDCap electronic data capture tools hosted at Atlantic Health System. Correlation between variables were calculated using Pearson coefficient or Spearman's rho depending on the distribution of the data variables. Results: Sixty subjects and caregivers were enrolled at 6 ICON centers; 52 were eligible for inclusion. The majority (40%) had Grade 1 bleeding. Most patients (82%) were seen in outpatient hematology clinic by the hematologist and had been referred by the emergency room (73%). The median time to consultation with a hematologist from onset of symptoms was 7 days (1-199) and the median time to diagnosis by hematologist from initial contact with a health care provider was 5 days (0-154). Most subjects had seen 2 health care providers prior to the hematologist. KIT proxy report cumulative scores were a mean of 76.03 (SD 14.72). There was no significant difference between the time to diagnosis or the time from initial encounter with health care provider to hematologist and initial level of worry (p=0.70 and 0.90, respectively). There was also no significant difference between the time to diagnosis or the time from initial encounter with health care provider to hematologist and KIT proxy scores (p=0.96 and 0.50, respectively). However, there was a significant decline in level of worry (scale 0-10) prior to the hematologist visit (median 8, range 1-10) to after the visit (median 4, range 1-10). The association between number of medical providers encountered prior to diagnosis and KIT proxy scores was not significant (p=0.45) (Table). Conclusions: In this study at 6 teaching institutions, we were unable to detect a significant difference in proxy-reported KIT scores relative to the number of health care providers seen or time from diagnosis until the first encounter with the hematologist. We were, however, able to detect a significant change in the level of caregiver worry pre- and post- visit with the pediatric hematologist, supporting a benefit of specialist care to the caregivers of children with ITP. This study was limited by its small sample size and retrospective design. ITP is considered a benign disease but is associated with a significant amount of worry and impact on QoL for patients and caregivers which warrants further investigation. Disclosures Lambert: CSL Behring: Consultancy; Amgen: Consultancy, Other; Bayer: Other: Ad boards; Novartis: Other: Ad boards, Research Funding; Shionogi: Consultancy; Kedrion: Consultancy; Sysmex: Consultancy; AstraZeneca: Research Funding; PDSA: Research Funding. Grace:Agios Pharmaceuticals, Inc: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Novartis: Research Funding.


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