4.6 Article

Barriers and Facilitators to Implementation of Health System Interventions Aiming to Welcome and Protect Immigrant Patients: a Qualitative Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 36, Issue 10, Pages 3071-3079

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-06788-4

Keywords

immigrant health; implementation research; health systems; disparities

Funding

  1. California Initiative for Health Equity Action [CPAC69085_16_05]

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This study identified factors influencing the implementation of interventions aimed at mitigating immigration-related stressors in healthcare systems by conducting qualitative interviews with stakeholders from 25 healthcare facilities across 5 states in the USA. Barriers to implementation included legal complexity and challenges in adopting systemic strategies, while facilitators included changes in national policy climate, communication among healthcare personnel, community partnerships, and a shared mission for health equity. Additionally, local variation in immigration-related policies and the role of champions and informal leaders were found to impact implementation success.
Background At the same time that federal policymakers have enforced restrictive immigration policies, healthcare systems across the USA are developing, and have implemented, interventions aimed at addressing immigration-related stressors faced by immigrant communities. Yet, little is known about the contextual determinants that influence their implementation success. Using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), this study identifies factors enabling or challenging the implementation of interventions aimed at mitigating immigration-related stressors in the healthcare context. Methods We used a qualitative research design to conduct 38 semi-structured interviews with stakeholders involved in implementation of interventions at 25 healthcare facilities across 5 states with the highest undocumented immigrant populations (California, Texas, New York, Florida, and Illinois). Interviews were conducted from May through August 2018. Constant comparative analysis was used to identify barrier and facilitator themes. Deductive coding was thereafter used to categorize themes according to CFIR domain. Results Barriers to implementation included perceptions of legal complexity and challenges to adopting such systemic strategies. Facilitators included a national policy climate that had brought immigrant health to the forefront, allowing for leveraging momentum towards institutional change; communication among healthcare personnel; existing community partnerships with immigrant rights and service organizations; and a shared sense of mission centering health equity. Local variation in immigration-related policies (e.g., local law agencies enforcing federal immigration laws) and heterogeneity of local immigrant communities also impacted implementation. Champions and informal leaders were integral to institutional efforts but not sufficient for sustainability. Perceived urgency to act superseded evaluation considerations, with all interventions in initial phases of implementation. Future iterations and evaluations of these interventions are needed to establish best practices and implementation determinants. Conclusion This is the first systematic study describing implementation determinants of immigration-related interventions across health systems. Identifying these determinants provides guidance to other healthcare organizations to effectively strategize and ensure implementation success.

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