September 14, 2021

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Barriers migrants face accessing healthcare during the pandemic

Professor Jenny Phillimore of the University of Birmingham says the report shows "accommodating asylum seekers in hotels makes access to much needed healthcare services difficult”
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Professor Jenny Phillimore of the University of Birmingham says the report shows "accommodating asylum seekers in hotels makes access to much needed healthcare services difficult”

Doctors of the World (DOTW), the Nuffield Foundation and the University of Birmingham have today published "Migration and Vulnerability During the Pandemic: Barriers to Wellbeing," which has revealed that refugees, asylum seekers and migrants reported higher levels of bad health and inadequate housing during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as difficulties registering with a GP and accessing remote healthcare services, suggesting significant unmet healthcare needs.

Conducted by leading academics from UoB, using data from DOTW, the report has examined health, housing and economic situations. It has also looked at the reasons why individuals needed to access DOTW's services and how often services were accessed.

Participants, whose data has anonymously reported on, come from four categories of migrants with insecure immigration status: refugees; ; refused asylum seekers, and undocumented migrants.

Concerningly, the number of requests for consultations dropped from 178 in January 2020 to 58 in September 2020, at one of the many peaks of the pandemic, which at the same time there was a significant increase in the number of users reporting 'bad' or 'very bad' health.

The majority of the consultation requests were around help with GP registration; help with NHS costs; queries about antenatal care; queries about immigration; queries about A&E and walk-in clinics, and queries and advice about secondary care (including charging). This finding provides further evidence that people with insecure immigration status are often not registered with a GP and are largely excluded from NHS services, and has implications for the COVID-19 vaccination program which requires individuals to have an NHS number and an active GP registration in order to book a vaccination appointment.

In addition to this, the number of people accessing DOTW services who reported to be in insecure/inadequate housing situations rose from 44% to 62.8% during the pandemic. However, the number of people reporting as roofless/homeless dropped slightly from 6.3% to 6.1%.

The data was collected as the government launched the "Everyone in" policy (27 March 2020) to provide hotel and emergency accommodation to all people sleeping on the streets regardless of immigration status, which allocated £3.2million of funds to local authorities in England to bring all those living on the streets into self-contained accommodation as a response to the COVID-19 crisis and suspended all evictions from Home Office asylum accommodation. During this period the numbers of asylum seekers living in hotel accommodation increased dramatically with the research indicating that they were struggling to access much needed healthcare whilst living in hotels.

The report makes a number of policy recommendations aimed improved public health measures and at supporting those in vulnerable circumstances in accessing healthcare. These include:

Anna Miller, Head of Policy and Advocacy at Doctors of the World, said: "This report makes for stark reading. Unable to access NHS services, forced to manage health conditions alone and struggling with poor housing, the report shows just how difficult the pandemic has been for people with insecure immigration status. And the importance of this cannot be understated—our pandemic response relies on whole population having to medical care and being able to protect themselves from the virus."

Jenny Phillimore, professor of migration and superdiversity at the University of Birmingham said: "Our analysis clearly indicates that the shift from face to face to virtual or phone services risks excluding the most vulnerable migrants. We are also concerned about the increase in numbers of asylum seekers accessing the service—this demonstrates, as several organizations have suggested, that the accommodating asylum seekers in hotels makes access to much needed healthcare services difficult."

Alex Beer, welfare program head at the Nuffield Foundation, said: "The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have exacerbated existing inequalities and vulnerable groups have faced particular adversities. This important research shines a light on the unmet health needs and precarious living situations faced by refugees, asylum seekers and vulnerable migrants, and highlights the need for policymakers and service providers to ensure that vulnerable groups have the means and support to access the health services they are entitled to."

More information: Migration and Vulnerability During the Pandemic: Barriers to Wellbeing, www.doctorsoftheworld.org.uk/w … -wellbeing-09.21.pdf

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