AI Article Synopsis

  • Immigrant children make up about 25% of US children and face high poverty and food insecurity levels, leading to reduced public benefit enrollment among their families.
  • Interviews with immigrant caregivers of hospitalized children revealed significant barriers like healthcare system complexities, immigration fears, and experiences of racism.
  • Suggested facilitators to improve access included a diverse workforce, language support, and partnerships with trusted local resources for better information and assistance.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Children in immigrant families comprise ∼25% of US children and live in families with high levels of poverty and food insecurity. Studies suggest a decline in public benefit enrollment among children in immigrant families. We aimed to explore perspectives on barriers and facilitators in accessing care among immigrant caregivers of hospitalized children.

Methods: With a general qualitative descriptive design, we developed a semistructured interview guide using an iterative process informed by literature and content expertise. Using purposive sampling, we recruited immigrant caregivers of hospitalized children in March 2020 and conducted interviews in English or Spanish. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and translated to English. Three authors coded transcripts using Dedoose and identified themes via thematic analysis.

Results: Analysis of 12 caregiver interviews revealed barriers and facilitators in accessing healthcare and public benefit use. Barriers included healthcare system barriers, immigration-related fear, and racism and discrimination. Within healthcare system barriers, subthemes included language barriers, cost, complexity of resource application, and lack of guidance on available benefits. Within immigration-related fear, subthemes included fear of familial separation, fear of deportation, fear that benefit use affects immigration status, and provider distrust. Healthcare system facilitators of resource use included recruiting diverse workforces, utilizing language interpretation, guidance on benefit enrollment, legal services, and mental health services. Participants also recommended hospital partnership with trusted information sources, including media stations and low-cost clinics.

Conclusions: Immigrant caregivers of hospitalized children identified barriers and facilitators in access to care. Further research is needed to assess the efficacy of caregiver-suggested interventions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/hpeds.2023-007276DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

barriers facilitators
16
children immigrant
12
immigrant families
12
immigrant caregivers
12
caregivers hospitalized
12
healthcare system
12
barriers
8
public benefit
8
benefit enrollment
8
facilitators accessing
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!