Immigration as a structural determinant of health: embodying clinical competence for treating im/migrant patients

The aim of this thesis is to argue what it means to embody clinical competence for treating im/migrant patients. Im/migrants are a distinct yet heterogeneous patient population. They come to the U.S. for a variety of reasons, with a great diversity of backgrounds, upbringings, experiences, and ways...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hyman, Jason Matthew
Other Authors: Barnes, Linda L.
Language:en_US
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/43399
Description
Summary:The aim of this thesis is to argue what it means to embody clinical competence for treating im/migrant patients. Im/migrants are a distinct yet heterogeneous patient population. They come to the U.S. for a variety of reasons, with a great diversity of backgrounds, upbringings, experiences, and ways of life. Considering the structural violence and push and pull factors directly connected to reasons for im/migration and experiences of distress upon settlement in the U.S., the central framework of this thesis is im/migration as a structural determinant of health. The operations of social structures, through policy, law enforcement, and discriminatory belief systems, make im/migrants structurally vulnerable. When healthcare providers treat im/migrant patients from a structurally informed approach to care, the context of these patients’ needs become more apparent and likelihood of positive health outcomes increases. Central to this structural approach, as I explain, is understanding how to best communicate with, gain the trust of, and provide effective social interventions for im/migrant patients relative to the operations of violent social structures. Im/migrant status truly is a determinant of health in its own right, and accordingly, care for im/migrant patients is also a specialized clinical realm with specific skills and competencies. As I argue, healthcare providers can only attain—embody—the competence for treating im/migrants through an awareness of how social structures affect these patients’ lives and modifies the delivery of care.