Bosnian and Soviet Refugees' Experiences with Health Care

Author:

Lipson Juliene G.1,Weinstein Harvey M.2,Gladstone Eleanor A.3,Sarnoff Rhonda H.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Community Health Systems, University of California, San Francisco

2. Human Rights Center, University of California, Berkeley

3. Center for Children's Environmental Health Research, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley

4. California Department of Health Services

Abstract

Studies of refugees in the United States rarely address health the first few years following resettlement in part because the refugees become subsumed under the foreign-born or immigrant category. A national study reaffirmed the so-called healthy immigrant effect, but fewer sick days and less physician use may actually reflect access problems, economic concerns, and health beliefs or practices that clash with American health care. Because statistics may mask differences in health and why people seek professional care, it is important to combine qualitative and quantitative approaches. This study examined health, illness, and health care use patterns of refugees in Northern California using a database analysis, a medical record review, and an ethnographic study of the Bosnian and former Soviet Union refugee communities. This article describes some ethnographic findings from participant observation, semistructured interviews, and focus groups, with an emphasis on people's experiences with health care, health risk behaviors, and self-care.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Nursing

Reference13 articles.

1. Health and Social Service Utilization Among Elderly Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union

2. Aroian, K. & Norris, A. (1999). Somatization and depression among former Soviet immigrants. Journal of Cultural Diversity, 6, 93-101.

3. Family Stress and Support among Former Soviet Immigrants

4. Brod, M. & Heurtin-Roberts, S. (1992). Older Russian émigrés and medical care. The Western Journal of Medicine, 157, 333-336.

5. Medical anthropology and epidemiology: Divergences or convergences?

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