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Utah's Foremost Platform for Undergraduate Research Presentation
2020 Abstracts

Addressing Refugee Health Disparities and Outcomes through Community-Based Participatory Research: Toward the Development of a Refugee-Led Community Health Board

Hyman, Rachel; Light, Tim; Montague, Angela; Lucero, Jessica (Utah State University)

Faculty Advisor: Lucero, Jessica (College of Humanities and Social Sciences; Sociology, Social Work and Anthropology Department)

Refugees are recognized as having unique and complex health needs which demand attention upon arrival and throughout the resettlement process (Agrawal & Venkatesh, 2016). Refugee populations are particularly vulnerable to health disparities due to push factors influencing forced migration (Tempany, 2009). These factors include exposure to political violence, natural disasters, and other forms of anthropogenic conflict (UNHCR, 2014). Refugees may arrive in the host country with undiagnosed and untreated health issues, such as infectious diseases, mental distress due to prior traumas, undiagnosed chronic illness, and nutritional deficiencies (Deen & Bridges, 2011). Refugee populations represent high rates of mental and physical health problems compared with the host population (Kirmayer, Gomez-Carrillo, & Veissi�re, 2017). Additional dynamics compound health disparities facing refugees. These include: language barriers, unfamiliarity with a complex health care system, limited health literacy, and inadequate alignment of medical treatments with religious and cultural beliefs (Bowen, 2001; Brown, Carroll, Fogarty, & Holt, 2010). Though there is robust scholarship in the literature and analysis of prevalent health disparities and needs of refugees post-resettlement, few studies address the specific health care concerns of refugees resettled in northern Utah. This study seeks to expand previous findings related to the most salient health care issues facing the refugee community and develop community response to address health disparity. A secondary aim of the research is to determine best practices for the provision of appropriate and effective health services.