Publications by authors named "Camille Duveau"

Objectives: Although people with a migration background (MB) have more unmet mental health needs than the general population, patients with a MB are still underrepresented in mental health care services. Provider bias towards these patients has been evidenced repeatedly but its driving factors remain elusive. We assessed the moderating effect of the individual (e.

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Background: Poor mental health is highly stigmatized and stereotyped, even more when it comes to migrant and ethnic minority groups (MEM). Belgium, which has a long history of immigration, is a good case study for analysing how the prevalence of mental illness (MI) has evolved over time and how such evolution had differed between MEM. This paper seeks to explore the prevalence of MI and potential inequalities among MEM compared to native Belgians between 1997 and 2018, shedding light on this important issue.

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Article Synopsis
  • People from different countries who move to a new place often have more mental health problems than those who were born there.
  • Doctors may sometimes treat these migrant patients unfairly without meaning to, especially if they don't understand their personal stories.
  • A study was done with Belgian doctors to see if learning more about a migrant patient's life would change their treatment decisions, and it showed that doctors still treated migrant patients less favorably even after learning about them.
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Background: General Practitioners (GPs) are the first point of contact for people from ethnic and migrant groups who have health problems. Discrimination can occur in this health care sector. Few studies, however, have investigated implicit and explicit biases in general practice against ethnic and migrant groups.

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