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https://studentshare.org/health-sciences-medicine/1662392-refugee-health-is-a-wicked-problem.
Refugee Health Refugee Health The issue of refugee health is a wicked problem that requires urgent intervention to avoid health hazards among other reasons. For instance, when refugees are crammed into small spaces, they contaminate the available social amenities leading to poor sanitation. Consequently, this results to the outbreak of waterborne diseases such as typhoid and dysentery that eventually could result to death of the affected people (Bhugra & Bhui, 2007). Additionally, passing of the diseases from one person to another often affects huge samples of the population within a given geographical setting occupied by the refugees.
It means controlling the disease menace becomes a hard task due to a large number requiring immediate healthcare support. Alternatively, with a large number of refugee health problems, health practitioners equally get overstretched because of limited healthcare resources such as drugs and other medicine (Estrine et al, 2010). Overall, refugee health is a serious problem in any society particularly if the government refuses to participate in alleviating the situation. 2. However, I don’t believe the health system should be responsible for all refugee policy.
This is because the health system lacks the capacity and resources to manage the refugee menace that is considered a worldwide problem. Instead, the government should put it as a priority among its challenges. In that case, for example, the government deserves to provide health professionals and build facilities that cater for refugees (Ingleby, 2006). Similarly, in order to manage the refugee policy, the government should disburse funds that cater for registered refugees to enable them live healthy lives.
The government is equally tasked with resettling refugees while according them longer health insurance that reflects their limited rights and liberties. Psychological counseling is another role that should be played by the government and not the health system (Toebes et al, 2012). It is because the government is endowed with both money and professionals to manage the refuge policy. ReferencesBhugra, D. & Bhui, K. (2007). Textbook of Cultural Psychiatry. Mason, OH: SAGE. Estrine, S. et al (2010).
Service Delivery for Vulnerable Populations: New Directions in Behavioral Health. New York, NY: Springer Publishing Company. Ingleby, D. (2006). Forced Migration and Mental Health: Rethinking the Care of Refugees and Displaced Persons. Mason, OH: Springer Science & Business Media. Toebes, B. et al (2012). The Right to Health. New Jersey, NJ: Springer.
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