“They Wait until the Disease Has Taking over You and the Doctors Cannot Do Anything about It”: Qualitative Insights from Harambee! 2.0

Author:

Hassan Shukri A.ORCID,Mohamed Farah,Sheikh Najma,Basualdo Guiomar,Daniel Nahom A.,Schwartz Rahel,Gebreselassie Beyene Tewelde,Beyene Yikealo K.,Gabreselassie Luwam,Bayru Kifleyesus,Tadesse Bethel,Libneh Hirut Amsalu,Shidane Mohamed,Benalfew Sophia,Ali Ahmed,Rao Deepa,Patel Rena C.,Kerani Roxanne P.ORCID

Abstract

African immigrants make up a large subgroup of Black/African-Americans in the US. However, because African immigrant groups are typically categorized as “Black,” little is known about their preventative healthcare needs. Differences in culture, life and healthcare experiences between African immigrant populations and US-born people may influence preventive health care uptake. Thus, policymakers and healthcare providers lack information needed to make informed decisions around preventive care for African immigrants. This formative study was conducted among the largest East African immigrant communities in King County, WA. We recruited religious leaders, community leaders, health professionals, and lay community members to participate in thirty key informant interviews and five focus group discussions (n = 72 total), to better understand preventative healthcare attitudes in these communities. Through inductive coding and thematic analysis, we identified factors that impact preventative healthcare attitudes of the Somali, Ethiopian and Eritrean immigrant communities and deter them from accessing and utilizing healthcare. Cultural beliefs and attitudes around preventative healthcare, mistrust of westernized healthcare, religious beliefs/views, intersecting identities and shared immigrant experiences all influence how participants view preventative healthcare. Our results suggest that interventions that address these factors are needed to most effectively increase uptake of preventative healthcare in African immigrant communities.

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference44 articles.

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