Cent Eur J Nurs Midw 2018, 9(3):873-879 | DOI: 10.15452/CEJNM.2018.09.0018

Public health nurse services for maternal-child immigrant healthcare: a literature review

Tantut Susanto
Department of Family and Community Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, University of Jember, Jember, Indonesia

Aim: To examine the impact of the complexity of regulations and restrictive policies on the accessibility of healthcare services for immigrants, particularly maternal and child healthcare. Public health nurses can facilitate management of healthcare services for immigrants in the community by preventing mortality and morbidity among the immigrant population. This literature review was used to identify the challenges faced by public health nurses in providing maternal-child immigrant healthcare.

Design: A literature review.

Methods: Relevant healthcare databases including PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus, and Google Scholar were searched using the following combination of search terms: public health nurses, maternal care, child care, and immigrants.

Results: Six articles were included in the review. Immigrants (undocumented immigrant families in particular) have limited access to public healthcare services, due to factors such as: socio-demographics; language barriers; cultural differences; the status of unregistered families; psychological distress; and problems with health insurance. Public health nurses deliver health education, maternal and postnatal check-ups, and vaccination through community and/or home-based service programs. The role of immigrant health volunteers is facilitated by the partnership between public health nurses and the immigrant population in providing comprehensive maternal and child healthcare in the community.

Conclusion: There are barriers that currently impact on the development of public health nurses' provision of maternal and child healthcare services to immigrants. Strategies that can be implemented to improve public health nurse competencies in maternal and child healthcare of immigrants include bicultural or bilingual training, and cultural competencies in visit programs.

Keywords: child care, immigrant, maternal care, public health nurses

Received: July 18, 2017; Accepted: January 9, 2018; Published: September 30, 2018  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Susanto T. Public health nurse services for maternal-child immigrant healthcare: a literature review. Central European Journal of Nursing and Midwifery. 2018;9(3):873-879. doi: 10.15452/CEJNM.2018.09.0018.
Download citation

References

  1. Calain-Watanabe T, Lee S. Access to maternal and child care for undocumented migrants in Japan. Journal of International Health. 2012;27(3):207-212.
  2. Frisbie WP, Cho Y, Hummer RA. Immigration and the health of Asian and Pacific Islander adults in the United States. American Journal of Epidemiology. 2001;153(4):372-380. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  3. Gany F, Thiel de Bocanegra H. Maternal-child immigrant health training: Changing knowledge and attitudes to improv health care delivery. Patient Education and Counseling. 1996;27(1):23-31. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  4. Gu YH, Lee S, Ushijima H. A study on the needs of medical, maternal and child health care in Chinese women students at the University of Tokyo. The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine. 2004;204(1):71-78. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  5. Guendelman S, Angulo V, Wier M, Oman D. Overcoming the odds: access to care for immigrant children in working poor families in California. Maternal and Child Health Journal. 2005;9(4):351-362. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  6. Jack SM, DiCenso A, Lohfeld L. A theory of maternal engagement with public health nurses and family visitors. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2005;49(2):182-190. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  7. Kim MJ, Cho HI, Cheon-Klessig YS, Gerace LM, Camilleri DD. Primary health care for Korean immigrants: sustaining a culturally sensitive model. Public Health Nursing. 2002;19(3):191-200. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  8. Ku L. Improving health insurance and access to care for children in immigrant families. Ambulatory Pediatrics : The Official Journal of the Ambulatory Pediatric Association. 2007;7(6):412-420. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  9. Paris R, Bronson M. A home-based intervention for immigrant and refugee trauma survivors: paraprofessionals working with high-risk mothers and infants. Zero to Three. 2006;27(2):37-45.
  10. Polit DF, Beck CT. Essentials of nursing research : appraising evidence for nursing practice. 7th ed. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2010.
  11. Ruiz-Casares M, Rousseau C, Laurin-Lamothe A, Rummens JA, Zelkowitz P, Crépeau F, Steinmetz N. Access to health care for undocumented migrant children and pregnant women: the paradox between values and attitudes of health care professionals. Maternal and Child Health Journal. 2013;17(2):292-298. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  12. Stevens CS, Lee S, Sawada T. Undocumented migrant maternal and child health care in Yokohama. Japanese Studies. 2000;20(1):49-65. Go to original source...
  13. Tveiten S, Severinsson E. Client supervision: meaning and experiences from the perspective of Norwegian public health nurses. Nursing and Health Sciences. 2004;6(4):279-286. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  14. United Nations. International migration and development report of the Secretary-General (Vol. 56609). Geneva. 2014a [cited 2017 Apr 14]. Available from: http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/population/publications/pdf/migration/A-69-207_en.pdf
  15. United Nations. Promotion and protection of human rights, including ways and means to promote the human rights of migrants (Vol. 58884). Geneva. 2014b [cited 2017 Mar 15]. Available from: https://reliefweb.int/report/world/promotionand-protection-human-rights-including-ways-and-meanspromote-human-rights

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0), which permits non-comercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original publication is properly cited. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.