Impact of restricting access to health care services on Syrian refugees in Jordan: evidence from cross-sectional surveys
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Emerald Publishing Limited
Materia
Impact Restrictions Access to health Syrian refugees
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Abu Siam, I.K., y Rubio Gómez, M. (2023). Impact of restricting access to health care services on Syrian refugees in Jordan: evidence from cross-sectional surveys. International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare, Vol. 16 No. 1. [https://doi.org/10.1108/IJHRH-08-2020-0068]
Sponsorship
UNHCR JordanAbstract
Purpose – Access to health-care services for refugees are always impacted by many factors and
strongly associated with population profile, nature of crisis and capacities of hosing countries.
Throughout refugee’s crisis, the Jordanian Government has adopted several healthcare access policies
to meet the health needs of Syrian refugees while maintaining the stability of the health-care system. The
adopted health-care provision policies ranged from enabling to restricting and from affordable to
unaffordable. The purpose of this paper is to identify the influence of restricted level of access to essential
health services among Syrian refugees in Jordan.
Design/methodology/approach – This paper used findings of a cross-sectional surveys conducted
over urban Syrian refugees in Jordan in 2017 and 2018 over two different health-care access
policies. The first were inclusive and affordable, whereas the other considered very restricting policy
owing to high inflation in health-care cost. Access indicators from four main thematic areas were
selected including maternal health, family planning, child health and monthly access of household.
A comparison between both years’ access indicators was conducted to understand access barriers
and its impact.
Findings – The comparison between findings of both surveys shows a sudden shift in health-care
access and utilization behaviors with increased barriers level thus increased health
vulnerabilities. Additionally, the finding during implementation of restricted access policy
proves the tendency among some refugees groups to adopt negative adaptation strategies to
reduce health-care cost. The participants shifted to use a fragmented health-care, reduced or
delayed care seeking and use drugs irrationally weather by self-medication or reduce drug
intake.
Originality/value – Understanding access barriers to health services and its negative short-term and
long-term impact on refugees’ health status as well as the extended risks to the host communities will help
states that hosting refugees building rational access policy to protect whole community and save public
health gains during and post crisis. Additionally, it will support donors to better mobilize resources
according to the needs while the humanitarian actors and service providers will better contribute to the
public health stability during refugee’s crisis.