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Dr Kate Warren Registrar in public health NHS Walsall. From OUTside to INvolvement. Partners in the project: - WELCOME - WRASSA - WARMA - Citizens Advice Bureau - NHS Walsall - Walsall Council Funded by Government Office West Midlands: Migration Impacts Fund
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Dr Kate Warren Registrar in public health NHS Walsall From OUTside to INvolvement
Partners in the project: - WELCOME - WRASSA - WARMA - Citizens Advice Bureau - NHS Walsall - Walsall Council Funded by Government Office West Midlands: Migration Impacts Fund Aim – Reduce the impact of migration on health and other public services in Walsall From OUTside to INvolvement
New migrants – who are they? Asylum seekers including unaccompanied children Refugees Refused asylum seekers Economic Migrants European Others via Points based system Family reunion Overseas students Undocumented migrants
The scale of migration in Walsall Numbers doubled after expansion of the EU to over 1200 new migrants per year Majority from South Asia and Eastern Europe Over 100 asylum seekers housed by the Border Agency Unknown numbers of refugees Unknown numbers of undocumented migrants Small numbers of Looked After Children
National Insurance Number Applications from overseas nationals, Walsall
Issues for Walsall • Variation (policy, economy, housing capacity) • Not a “critical mass” for specialist services such as Birmingham/Coventry • Reliance on voluntary sector and short term projects • Services require extra time and resources • Mobility of migrants – continuity of care • Tight geographical spread • Holistic/social approach to health needed
Commissioned activity • Certification for volunteers to provide advice • Drop-in / phone-in: information for clients • Arts and social events as engagement tools • Recruitment to local involvement channels • Training and collaboration with services • Regional networking • Translated resources produced and shared (Welcome to the West Midlands website)
Primary care Access to General Practice Appropriate use of services – Choose Well Translation tools / interpreters Awareness of staff – cultural norms, entitlements to healthcare Health
Maternal and child health Identification and appropriate care for migrant women with specific problems e.g. Female Genital Mutilation Integration of NICE guidance and pathway for vulnerable women in service specification for midwifery Child protection awareness Health
Mental Health Pre-migration factors War, torture, rape, persecution Post-migration factors Poverty, poor housing, social isolation, immigration processes, language barrier Cultural perceptions of mental health Awareness of specialist area in MH services Creative writing workshops resulting in a published booklet Health
Health protection Blood borne viruses – HIV, Hepatitis Encouraging testing Tuberculosis Symptom awareness Sex workers South Area Partnership Health
Housing Poverty – benefits Crime/safety Employment Education/training including ESOL Social isolation Community cohesion Social determinants of health and other issues
Importance of retaining specialist knowledge and momentum Capacity building in voluntary sector Embedding lessons learnt into commissioning processes Elements of service delivered by different agencies Changes in Public Health- can this help? What Now?