Abstract :
The ‘Barriers to Access to Care for Ethnic Minority Seniors ’ (BACEMS) study in
Vancouver, British Columbia, found that immigrant families torn between
changing values and the economic realities that accompany immigration cannot
always provide optimal care for their elders. Ethnic minority seniors further
identified language barriers, immigration status, and limited awareness of the
roles of the health authority and of specific service providers as barriers to health
care. The configuration and delivery of health services, and health-care providers’
limited knowledge of the seniors’ needs and confounded these problems. To
explore the barriers to access, the BACEMS study relied primarily on focus group
data collected from ethnic minority seniors and their families and from health and
multicultural service providers. The applicability of the recently developed model
of ‘candidacy’, which emphasises the dynamic, multi-dimensional and contingent
character of health-care access to ethnic minority seniors, was assessed.
The candidacy framework increased sensitivity to ethnic minority seniors’ issues
and enabled organisation of the data into manageable conceptual units, which
facilitated translation into recommendations for action, and revealed gaps that
pose questions for future research. It has the potential to make Canadian research
on the topic more co-ordinated.
Keywords :
SHARON KOEHN , immigrants , access to services , candidacy model , continuing care , British Columbia , Seniors