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The nexus of immigration regulation and health governance: a scoping review of the extent to which right to access healthcare by migrants, refugees and asylum seekers was upheld in the United Kingdom during COVID-19
被引:1
|作者:
Van Hout, M. C.
[1
,5
]
Madroumi, R.
[2
]
Andrews, M. D.
[3
]
Arnold, R.
[4
]
Hope, V. D.
[1
]
Taegtmeyer, M.
[3
]
机构:
[1] Liverpool John Moores Univ, Fac Hlth, Sch Publ & Allied Hlth, Liverpool, England
[2] Liverpool John Moores Univ, Fac Hlth, Sch Psychol, Liverpool, England
[3] Univ Liverpool Liverpool Sch Trop Med, Fac Clin Sci & Int Publ Hlth, Dept Clin Sci, Liverpool, England
[4] Univ Liverpool, Inst Populat Hlth, Dept Publ Hlth Policy & Syst, Liverpool, England
[5] Liverpool John Moores Univ, Fac Hlth, Sch Publ & Allied Hlth, Exchange Stn, Tithebarn St, Liverpool L2 2QP, England
来源:
关键词:
Migrants;
Refugees;
Asylum seekers;
No recourse to public funds;
Healthcare;
COVID-19;
Human rights;
Immigration;
United Kingdom;
DIGITAL DIVIDE;
VACCINE;
D O I:
10.1016/j.puhe.2024.04.012
中图分类号:
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号:
1004 ;
120402 ;
摘要:
Objectives: Complementing the well-established evidence base on health inequalities experienced by migrants, refugees and asylum seekers in the UK; we examined the extent to which their right to equal non-discriminatory access to health services (promotive, preventive, curative) was upheld during the COVID-19 pandemic. Study design: Arksey and O0Malley's scoping review framework. Methods: A comprehensive search was conducted on Medline, PubMed, and CINAHL using detailed MESH terms, for literature published between 01 January 2020 and 01 January 2024. The process was supported by a ten-page Google search and hand searching of reference lists. 42 records meeting the inclusion criteria were charted, coded inductively and analysed thematically in an integrated team-based approach. Results: Dissonance between immigration regulation and health governance is illustrated in four themes: Health systems leveraged to (re)enforce the hostile environment; Dissonance between health rights on paper and in practice; Structural failures to overcome communication and digital exclusion; and COVID-19 vaccine (in)equity exacerbated fear, mistrust and exclusion. Migrants, refugees and asylum seekers encountered substantial individual, structural and policy-level barriers to accessing healthcare in the UK during COVID-19. Insecure immigration status, institutional mistrust, data-sharing and charging fears, communication challenges and digital exclusion impacted heavily on their ability to access healthcare in an equitable non-discriminatory manner. Conclusions: An inclusive and innovative health equity and rights-based responses reaching all migrants, refugees and asylum seekers are warranted if the National Health Service is to live up to its promise of 'leaving no one behind' in post-pandemic and future responses. (c) 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Royal Society for Public Health. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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页码:21 / 29
页数:9
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