TY - JOUR
T1 - Level of distress, somatisation and beliefs on health-disease in newly arrived immigrant patients attended in primary care centres in Catalonia and definition of professional competences for their most effective management
T2 - PROMISE Project
AU - Torán-Monserrat, Pere
AU - Cebrià-Andreu, Jordi
AU - Arnau-Figueras, Josep
AU - Segura-Bernal, Jordi
AU - Ibars-Verdaguer, Anna
AU - Massons-Cirera, Josep
AU - Barreiro-Montaña, M. Carmen
AU - Santamaria-Bayes, Sandra
AU - Limón-Ramírez, Esther
AU - Montero-Alia, Juan José
AU - Pérez-Testor, Carles
AU - Pera-Blanco, Guillem
AU - Muñoz-Ortiz, Laura
AU - Palma-Sevillano, Carolina
AU - Segarra-Gutiérrez, Gerard
AU - Corbella-Santomà, Sergi
N1 - Funding Information:
This project has received a grant ‘Gonçal Calvo’, from the Acadèmia de Ciències Mèdiques i de la Salut de Catalunya i Balears (Mataró, Spain) 2010 and has won the honourable mention of the 6th 2010 Award on Primary Health Research of the Barcelona Health Region.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Background: Newly arrived immigrant patients who frequently use primary health care resources have difficulties in verbal communication. Also, they have a system of beliefs related to health and disease that makes difficult for health care professionals to comprehend their reasons for consultation, especially when consulting for somatic manifestations. Consequently, this is an important barrier to achieve optimum care to these groups. The current project has two main objectives: 1. To define the different stressors, the level of distress perceived, and its impact in terms of discomfort and somatisation affecting the main communities of immigrants in our area, and 2. To identify the characteristics of cross-cultural competence of primary health care professionals to best approach these reasons for consultation. Methods/Design. It will be a transversal, observational, multicentre, qualitative-quantitative study in a sample of 980 people from the five main non-European Union immigrant communities residing in Catalonia: Maghrebis, Sub-Saharans, Andean South Americans, Hindustanis, and Chinese. Sociodemographic data, level of distress, information on the different stressors and their somatic manifestations will be collected in specific questionnaires. Through a semi-structured interview and qualitative methodology, it will be studied the relation between somatic manifestations and particular beliefs of each group and how these are associated with the processes of disease and seeking for care. A qualitative methodology based on individual interviews centred on critical incidents, focal groups and in situ questionnaires will be used to study the cross-cultural competences of the professionals. Discussion. It is expected a high level of chronic stress associated with the level of somatisations in the different non-European Union immigrant communities. The results will provide better knowledge of these populations and will improve the comprehension and the efficacy of the health care providers in prevention, communication, care management and management of resources.
AB - Background: Newly arrived immigrant patients who frequently use primary health care resources have difficulties in verbal communication. Also, they have a system of beliefs related to health and disease that makes difficult for health care professionals to comprehend their reasons for consultation, especially when consulting for somatic manifestations. Consequently, this is an important barrier to achieve optimum care to these groups. The current project has two main objectives: 1. To define the different stressors, the level of distress perceived, and its impact in terms of discomfort and somatisation affecting the main communities of immigrants in our area, and 2. To identify the characteristics of cross-cultural competence of primary health care professionals to best approach these reasons for consultation. Methods/Design. It will be a transversal, observational, multicentre, qualitative-quantitative study in a sample of 980 people from the five main non-European Union immigrant communities residing in Catalonia: Maghrebis, Sub-Saharans, Andean South Americans, Hindustanis, and Chinese. Sociodemographic data, level of distress, information on the different stressors and their somatic manifestations will be collected in specific questionnaires. Through a semi-structured interview and qualitative methodology, it will be studied the relation between somatic manifestations and particular beliefs of each group and how these are associated with the processes of disease and seeking for care. A qualitative methodology based on individual interviews centred on critical incidents, focal groups and in situ questionnaires will be used to study the cross-cultural competences of the professionals. Discussion. It is expected a high level of chronic stress associated with the level of somatisations in the different non-European Union immigrant communities. The results will provide better knowledge of these populations and will improve the comprehension and the efficacy of the health care providers in prevention, communication, care management and management of resources.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84876990870&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/1471-2296-14-54
DO - 10.1186/1471-2296-14-54
M3 - Article
C2 - 23641671
AN - SCOPUS:84876990870
SN - 1471-2296
VL - 14
JO - BMC Family Practice
JF - BMC Family Practice
M1 - 54
ER -