费城拉丁裔移民生育者对减轻产前护理使用寒蝉效应的看法。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-26 DOI:10.1097/MLR.0000000000002002
Diana Montoya-Williams, Alejandra Barreto, Alicia Laguna-Torres, Diana Worsley, Kate Wallis, Michelle-Marie Peña, Lauren Palladino, Nicole Salva, Lisa Levine, Angelique Rivera, Rosalinda Hernandez, Elena Fuentes-Afflick, Katherine Yun, Scott Lorch, Senbagam Virudachalam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究设计:研究设计:社区参与的定性研究,采用归纳式主题分析法对半结构式访谈进行分析:了解拉丁裔移民最近的产前护理经历,并制定社区知情策略,以减轻与政策相关的产前护理利用率寒蝉效应:背景:由于惩罚性移民政策(即 "寒蝉效应")而导致的移民医疗保健利用率下降在拉丁裔分娩者产前和产后都有大量记录:从一家产科诊所、两家儿科初级保健诊所和两家社区组织的客户群中招募了大费城地区目前或近期怀孕的拉丁裔移民。有 24 人达到了主题饱和。参与者的怀孕叙述以及他们对医疗服务提供者和系统如何使移民产前护理更安全、更舒适的看法:结果:与会者提出的减轻产前寒蝉效应的建议包括培训产前保健提供者,以敏感的方式就移民权利展开讨论,并重申对移民身份保密。与会者建议,医疗保健系统应扩大怀孕移民的信息来源,与社区组织合作传播信息,或增加接触了解移民医疗保健权利的可信个人的机会。与会者还建议对非医务人员进行使用翻译的培训:大费城地区的拉丁裔怀孕和分娩移民描述了在使用产前护理方面持续存在的恐惧和困惑,以及遭受歧视的经历。参与者提出的减轻与移民有关的寒蝉效应的建议可以转化为潜在的政策和计划干预措施,这些措施可以在当地实施,并进行评估以扩大适用性。
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Philadelphia Latine Immigrant Birthing People's Perspectives on Mitigating the Chilling Effect on Prenatal Care Utilization.

Research design: Community-engaged qualitative study using inductive thematic analysis of semistructured interviews.

Objective: To understand Latine immigrants' recent prenatal care experiences and develop community-informed strategies to mitigate policy-related chilling effects on prenatal care utilization.

Background: Decreased health care utilization among immigrants due to punitive immigration policies (ie, the "chilling effect") has been well-documented among Latine birthing people both pre and postnatally.

Patients and methods: Currently or recently pregnant immigrant Latine people in greater Philadelphia were recruited from an obstetric clinic, 2 pediatric primary care clinics, and 2 community-based organization client pools. Thematic saturation was achieved with 24 people. Participants' pregnancy narratives and their perspectives on how health care providers and systems could make prenatal care feel safer and more comfortable for immigrants.

Results: Participants' recommendations for mitigating the chilling effect during the prenatal period included training prenatal health care providers to sensitively initiate discussions about immigrants' rights and reaffirm confidentiality around immigration status. Participants suggested that health care systems should expand sources of information for pregnant immigrants, either by partnering with community organizations to disseminate information or by increasing access to trusted individuals knowledgeable about immigrants' rights to health care. Participants also suggested training non-medical office staff in the use of interpreters.

Conclusion: Immigrant Latine pregnant and birthing people in greater Philadelphia described ongoing fear and confusion regarding the utilization of prenatal care, as well as experiences of discrimination. Participants' suggestions for mitigating immigration-related chilling effects can be translated into potential policy and programmatic interventions which could be implemented locally and evaluated for broader applicability.

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