Login / Signup

Sub-Saharan African immigrant women's experiences of (lack of) access to appropriate healthcare in the public health system in the Basque Country, Spain.

Iratxe Pérez-UrdialesIsabel GoicoleaMiguel San SebastiánAmaia IrazustaIda Linander
Published in: International journal for equity in health (2019)
For Sub-Saharan African immigrant women, accessing appropriate healthcare in the Basque Country was perceived to be subject to institutional barriers. At the legal level, barriers included lack of entitlement, difficulties in fulfilling legal access conditions and lack of documentation. The lack of communication with health centre staff and their attitudes, guided by a stereotyped social image of immigrants and black people, also hindered their possibilities of receiving appropriate healthcare. Facilitators for accessing healthcare included strategies from individual professionals, personal networks and social actors to help them to cope with the barriers. There is a need of reinforcing inclusion values and rights-based approach to attention among staff at the health centres to have more non-discriminatory and culturally appropriate health systems.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • type diabetes
  • insulin resistance
  • emergency department
  • physical activity
  • climate change
  • adverse drug
  • social media