Abstract

Oral health concerns in Eritrean refugees have been an overlooked subject. This qualitative study explored the access of Eritrean refugees and asylum-seekers (ERNRAS) to oral health care services in Heidelberg, Germany, as well as their perceptions and attitudes towards oral health care. It involved 25 participants. We employed online semi-structured interviews (n = 15) and focus group discussions (n = 2). The data was recorded, transcribed, and analysed, using thematic analysis. The study found out that most of the participants have a relatively realistic perception and understanding of oral health. However, they have poor dental care practices, whilst a few have certain misconceptions of the conventional oral hygiene tools. Along with the majority’s concerns regarding psychosocial attributes of poor oral health, some participants are routinely consuming Berbere (a traditional spice-blended pepper) to prevent bad breath. Structural or supply-side barriers to oral healthcare services included: communication hurdles; difficulty in identifying and navigating the German health system; gaps in transculturally, professionally, and communicationally competent oral health professionals; cost of dental treatment; entitlement issues (asylum-seekers); and appointment mechanisms. Individual or demand-side barriers comprised: lack of self-sufficiency; issue related to dental care beliefs, trust, and expectation from dentists; negligence and lack of adherence to dental treatment follow-up; and fear or apprehension of dental treatment. To address the oral health burdens of ERNRAS, it is advised to consider oral health education, language-specific, inclusive, and culturally and professionally appropriate healthcare services.

Highlights

  • Literature regarding the magnitude of oral health burdens of the widely dispersed Eritrean refugees and asylum seekers is scarce

  • Eritrean refugees and asylum-seekers livingliving in Heidelberg, GerGermany

  • Compared to findings reached by Keboa and colleagues [28], our study identified the psychosocial concerns of bad breath and further new insight into a custom followed by some Eritrean refugees and asylum-seekers (ERNRAS), mainly to prevent oral malodour by routine consumption of a traditional pepper (Berbere)

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Summary

Introduction

Literature regarding the magnitude of oral health burdens of the widely dispersed Eritrean refugees and asylum seekers is scarce. The world is experiencing a surging number of forcefully displaced persons with 70.8 million in 2019. They were either refugee (25.9 million), internally-displaced persons (41.3 million), or asylum-seekers (3.6 million) [1]. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) defined a refugee as “someone who is unable or unwilling to return to their country of origin owing to a wellfounded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion [2]”. An asylum-seeker, though, is “someone whose claim has not yet been decided on by the country in which the claim is submitted [3]”. By the end of 2018, 10% of the world’s refugees resided in Europe [4]

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