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Access to Health Care for Undocumented Migrant Children and Pregnant Women: The Paradox Between Values and Attitudes of Health Care Professionals
Authors:Mónica Ruiz-Casares  Cécile Rousseau  Audrey Laurin-Lamothe  Joanna Anneke Rummens  Phyllis Zelkowitz  François Crépeau  Nicolas Steinmetz
Institution:1. Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
2. Santé Mentale Jeunesse, McGill University/CSSS de la Montagne, 7085 Hutchison, Office 204.2.14, Montreal, QC, H3N 1Y9, Canada
3. Department of Psychiatry, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Canada
4. Department of Sociology, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montreal, Canada
5. Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
6. Community Health Systems Resource Group, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada
7. Faculty of Law, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
8. Department of Pediatrics, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
9. Montreal Department of Public Health, Montreal, Canada
Abstract:Access to health care for undocumented migrant children and pregnant women confronts human rights and professional values with political and institutional regulations that limit services. In order to understand how health care professionals deal with these diverging mandates, we assessed their attitudes toward providing care to this population. Clinicians, administrators, and support staff (n = 1,048) in hospitals and primary care centers of a large multiethnic city responded to an online survey about attitudes toward access to health care services. Analysis examined the role of personal and institutional correlates of these attitudes. Foreign-born respondents and those in primary care centers were more likely to assess the present access to care as a serious problem, and to endorse broad or full access to services, primarily based on human rights reasons. Clinicians were more likely than support staff to endorse full or broad access to health care services. Respondents who approved of restricted or no access also endorsed health as a basic human right (61.1%) and child development as a priority (68.6%). A wide gap separates attitudes toward entitlement to health care and the endorsement of principles stemming from human rights and the best interest of the child. Case-based discussions with professionals facing value dilemmas and training on children’s rights are needed to promote equitable practices and advocacy against regulations limiting services.
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