Description
In this time of large-scale global migration at levels unrivalled since World War II, primary care practitioners are providing the first line of care to economic immigrants and refugees. In doing so, they face daily the considerable challenges that this heterogenic group brings in terms of communication, culture, and legal status as well as physical and mental health. This accessible book has been carefully crafted to enable primary health care professionals to develop the skills and competencies required to deliver appropriate services to this diverse group of patients and, in turn, to ensure equity in health care for all.
Key features:
- Highly practical focus, with clinical cases, learning objectives, concept and ‘What this Means in Practice’ boxes, and ‘Practical Tools for Meeting the Patient’ sections
- Covers widely applicable themes in health care including health literacy, communication, the cultures and sub-cultures of systems
- Fully referenced, combining policy, academic literature and practical advice with a broad international scope
- Prestigious author team with chapters written by international contributors with in-depth subject expertise curated by expert editors
- Endorsed and supported by the WONCA Special Interest Group on Migrant Care, International Health and Travel Medicine
The book satisfies the urgent need for a hands-on guide to support and help general practitioners and other members of the primary health care team improve their provision of care not only to immigrants, but to other vulnerable groups and the whole society.
Table of Contents
Preface
Foreword
Background information – Kumar and Diaz
Part 1: Overarching Themes
- Migration and immigrants – BN Kumar & E Diaz
- Migration health theories: healthy migrant effect and allostatic load. Can both be true? – BN Kumar & E Diaz
- Culture, language and the clinic - three stories, two keys- I Heath & E Schei
- The Ethics of Migrant Health: Power and Privilege versus Rights and Entitlements. G Oms, R Hammonds & I Keygnaert
- Discrimination and health – J H Magnus
- Immigrants’ use of primary health care services: overuse, underuse or both? – E Diaz & BN Kumar
Part 2: A life course perspective on migrant health- Y ben Shlomo, L Mamluk & S Redwood
- Promoting the Health of Migrant Children and Children of Immigrants –K M Perreira & L T Fadnes
- Adolescent migrant health –M Catallozzi, C A Kolff, R Fowler & T McGovern
- Health care for older and elderly immigrants – C O’Donnell
- Family and group as a unit of care - B Kiely &B Viken,
Part 3: Health challenges at the clinic- M van den Muijsenbergh
- Gynaecology and obstetrics– B Austveg, K A Møen
- Chronic disease prevention and management: an understated priority N Nitti
- Understanding unexplained and complex symptoms and diseases- M Sodemann
- Cancer among immigrant patients- K Albrecht & S De Maesschalck
- Immigration and Mental health - R Farrington
- Multimorbidity- the complexity - A Calderón & L Gimeno
Part 4: Opportunities and tools when meeting immigrant patients- C Phillips & J Benson
- Bridging Cultural and Language Discordance – E Diaz & BN Kumar
- Evidence Based Guidelines and Advocacy– K Pottie
- Diversity sensitive versus adapted services for immigrants: the example of dementia care in Germany - O Razum & H Tezcan-Guentekin
- Assessments tools for dementia an depression in older immigrants – T R Nielsen & M Nørredam
- Community participation in primary healthcare: meaningful involvement of immigrants- A MacFarlane & C Lionis
About the Editors
Bernadette N. Kumar is a medical graduate from India, with a doctorate in Epidemiology and Public Health from the University of Oslo, Norway and post doc post-doctoral research fellowship at the Institute for Psychiatry, University of Oslo. Kumar has several years' international experience working for UNICEF, WHO, WFP, World Bank and NORAD in Asia en Africa (1989-2000). Migration and Health has been the focus of her research and she is the co-editor a text book on Immigrant Health in Norway. She was appointed Director of the Norwegian Center for Migration and Minority Health in 2010 and Associate Professor, Global Health at the Institute for Health and Society, University of Oslo in 2013. She has been a commissioner of the Lancet Commission on Migration and Health (2018). Currently she works at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health and is the President of the EUPHA section of Migration and Ethnic Minority Health.
Esperanza Diaz studied medicine and became specialist in Family Medicine in Madrid, Spain. In 1999 she moved to Norway, where she was certified Norwegian specialist in Family Medicine and took her PhD at the University of Bergen. She has for many years worked as a General Practitioner with a hugely diverse population. She works as Associate Professor at the Institute for Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen, and as a senior researcher at the Unit for Migration and Health at the Norwegian Institute for Public Health. Diaz has several publications in the field of immigrant health. She volunteers for a local non-profit organization providing care for undocumented migrants.
About the Series
The WONCA Family Medicine series is a collection of books written by world-wide experts and practitioners of family medicine, in collaboration with The World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA).
WONCA is a not-for-profit organization and was founded in 1972 by member organizations in 18 countries. It now has 118 Member Organizations in 131 countries and territories with membership of about 500,000 family doctors and more than 90 per cent of the world’s population.
Learn more…
Subject Categories
BISAC Subject Codes/Headings:
- MED000000
- MEDICAL / General
- MED026000
- MEDICAL / Emergency Medicine
- MED029000
- MEDICAL / Family & General Practice
- MED078000
- MEDICAL / Public Health