A Look at Good Practice Examples in Health Practices,

Erasmus+ YouthCooperation partnerships in youthID: 2021-2-TR01-KA220-YOU-000050184
EC Contribution
€243,904
Consortium Size
10 orgs
Start Year
2021
Summary

Background Natural and man-made disasters and crises occur constantly on earth. These crises are global public health problems that affect a large number of people. Thousands of people are dying or injured by war or crises. Survivors leave their homes and seek refuge in other cities or migrate to other countries and try to survive as asylum seekers or refugees. Those who are injured or surviving the war, people who have to migrate elsewhere, are negatively affected mentally and socially, especially physically. Since many people have to leave their physical and social environment, i.e. their natural habitat, where they feel safe, they also lack the psychosocial support necessary for the formation and maintenance of the state of well-being. In addition, victims of this humanitarian crisis are often deprived of the conditions to provide minimum living standards (housing, education, health, safety, work). In such cases, the presence of disadvantaged (asylum seeker, refugee, disabled) groups in the community can affect other groups and cause the state of social well-being to deteriorate. Therefore, it is necessary to develop and implement health policies that prioritize disadvantaged community groups, especially asylum seekers, to improve - raise and maintain the health level of society. Today, more than 250 million people live as immigrants outside their home countries. With migration, new health problems can be moved to the migratory country. During the migration process, the health systems of the countries and countries that cross the route between the source country and the target country are also affected by this mobility. However, the problems of migrants who are physically and psychologically affected cannot be solved because the health system of the country they have just arrived in is not adequately prepared. Factors such as lack of health insurance, language barriers and low socioeconomic status affect migrants' access and use of health care. As mentioned report on the health of refugees and migrants in the WHO European Region: no public health without refugee and migrant health (2018); almost one in 10 people in the WHO European Region is currently an international migrant. Finding work is a major reason why people migrate internationally, although violence, conflict, natural disasters and human rights abuses are also contributors. Migration and displacement are social determinants of health affecting the health of refugees and migrants. The WHO Regional Office for Europe established the Migration and Health programme for gaining an overview of the health status of refugees and migrants and health system response is paramount in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and in ensuring universal health coverage, and is in line with the Health 2020 framework. The project is designed to be by examining the access of migrants and refugees from high-risk groups to health care on an ethical basis during the pandemic process, an advocacy role will be taken to ensure justice in health. It aims to observe how the pandemic process affects systems developed for disadvantaged groups, to examine examples of successful good practice and to investigate and examine the level of influence of institutions working in the field of migrants, especially non-governmental organizations working in the field of youth. So you can get It will provide the opportunity to better manage the remaining process of the Covid-19 pandemic and our future in terms of public health by bringing good practice examples of health and psychosocial services for disadvantaged groups in disasters such as epidemic diseases to our country and sharing what is happening in our country with our

Consortium (10)