1. Searching for choice and control: Western Australian service provider experiences of health, housing and migration.
- Author
-
Connor, Elizabeth, Blackford, Krysten, McCausland, Kahlia, Lobo, Roanna, and Crawford, Gemma
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,MENTAL health ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH policy ,INTERVIEWING ,SOCIAL services ,WORK environment ,JUDGMENT sampling ,REFLEXIVITY ,MIGRANT labor ,HOMELESS persons ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,COMMUNITY life ,HOUSING ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,HOMELESSNESS ,PUBLIC administration ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
This research aimed to inform approaches to increase access to secure housing and improve mental health outcomes for migrants from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds (hereafter migrants) who are generally invisible in health and social policy and service provision in Western Australia. We used semi-structured, in-depth interviews (n = 11) and interpretative phenomenological analysis to explore service provider experiences and perspectives of issues impacting service provision and the needs of migrants in this context. Five superordinate themes reveal complex experiences for both service providers and the migrants with whom they work. Findings reflect tensions between contemporary notions of choice and control and a social service system that is difficult to navigate, reflects systemic racism and appears to rely heavily on the non-government sector. Insights have important and practical implications for health promotion policy, practice and research. Recommendations include improvements to housing access, provision, funding and policies; addressing service barriers via staff training and more accessible community resources; and co-design and community outreach approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF