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首页> 外文期刊>Conflict and Health >“What’s happening in Syria even affects the rocks”: a qualitative study of the Syrian refugee experience accessing noncommunicable disease services in Jordan
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“What’s happening in Syria even affects the rocks”: a qualitative study of the Syrian refugee experience accessing noncommunicable disease services in Jordan

机译:“叙利亚发生了什么,甚至会影响岩石”:对叙利亚难民经验的定性研究,获得约旦的非传染性疾病服务

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Humanitarian actors and host-countries in the Middle East and North Africa region are challenged with meeting the health needs of Syrian refugees and adjusting the response to contemporary humanitarian conditions - urban-based refugees, stressed host-country health systems and high NCD prevalence. Although several studies have explored NCD prevalence, utilization of services and barriers to access, these analyses took place prior to dramatic shifts in Jordanian health policy and did not account for nuances in health seeking and utilization behaviors or operational barriers. Accordingly, we aimed to understand the depth and nuances of Syrian refugees' experiences accessing NCD services in urban and semi-urban settings in Jordan. A qualitative study was conducted to explore the healthcare experiences of Syrian refugees in Jordan. The study team conducted 68 in-depth interviews with Syrian refugees in urban and semi-urban locations in central and northern Jordan. The findings indicated four themes key to understanding the healthcare experience: (1) emotional distress is a central concern and is frequently highlighted as the trigger for a non-communicable disease or its exacerbation; (2) service provision across all sectors - government, NGO, private - is complex, inadequate, expensive and fragmented, making engagement with the health sector physically and financially burdensome; (3) given financial constraints, participants make harmful decisions that further damage their health in order to reduce financial burdens, and (4) host-community members actively exhibit solidarity with their refugee neighbors and specifically do so during emergency health episodes. The findings from this study can be used to inform program design for forcibly displaced persons with NCDs and identify points of entry for effective interventions. Opportunities exist for humanitarian and host-country actors to provide more comprehensive NCD services and to improve the relevance and the quality of care provided to Syrian refugees in Jordan. Global and national funding will need to align with front-line realities and foster better coordination of services between host-country health systems, private actors and non-governmental organizations.
机译:中东和北非地区的人道主义行动者和东道国都受到叙利亚难民的健康需求的挑战,并调整对当代人道主义条件的回应 - 城市难民,强调东道国卫生系统和高NCD流行。虽然有几项研究探讨了NCD普遍存在,利用服务和障碍的访问,但在约旦卫生政策的戏剧性转变之前发生了这些分析,并没有考虑到健康寻求和利用行为或运营障碍的细微差别。因此,我们旨在了解叙利亚难民在约旦城市和半城市环境中访问NCD服务的经验的深度和微调。进行了一个定性研究,以探索约旦叙利亚难民的医疗保健经验。该研究团队在中部和北部的城市和半城市地点进行了68次进行了68次对​​叙利亚难民的访谈。调查结果表明了解医疗保健经验的四个主题:(1)情绪困扰是一种核心问题,经常被突出显示为非传染性疾病的触发或加剧; (2)跨所有部门的服务提供 - 政府,非政府组织,私人 - 复杂,不足,昂贵,分散,与健康部门的身体和经济繁琐的抵抗(3)鉴于财务限制,参与者对其进行有害决定,以减少金融负担,以减少金融负担,(4)主办社区成员与其难民邻国积极表现出团结,并在紧急卫生发作期间专门展示着团结。本研究的调查结果可用于向计划设计通知有利于NCD的强制流离失所者,并确定有效干预措施的入学点。人道主义和东道国行动者存在的机会,以提供更全面的NCD服务,并改善约旦叙利亚难民提供的相关性和保障质量。全球和国家资金需要与前线现实保持一致,促进东道国卫生系统,私人行动者和非政府组织之间更好地协调服务。

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