Among the world’s 272 million international migrants, more than 25 million are from the former Soviet Union (FSU), yet there is a paucity of literature available about FSU immigrants’ health literacy. Besides linguistic and cultural differences, FSU immigrants often come from a distinct healthcare system affecting their ability to find, evaluate, process, and use health information in the host countries. In this scoping review and commentary, we describe the health literacy issues of FSU immigrants and provide an overview of FSU immigrants’ health literacy based on the integrated health literacy model. We purposefully consider the three most common locations where FSU immigrants have settled: the USA, Germany, and Israel. For context, we describe the healthcare systems of the three host countries and the two post-Soviet countries to illustrate the contribution of system-level factors on FSU immigrants’ health literacy. We identify research gaps and set a future research agenda to help understand FSU immigrants’ health literacy across countries. Amidst the ongoing global population changes related to international migration, this article contributes to a broad-scope understanding of health literacy among FSU immigrants related to the system-level factors that may also apply to other immigrants, migrants, and refugees.
Public health nursing has a code of ethics that guides practice. This includes the American Nurses Association Code of Ethics for Nurses, Principles of the Ethical Practice of Public Health, and the Scope and Standards of Public Health Nursing. Human rights and Rights-based care in public health nursing practice are relatively new. They reflect human rights principles as outlined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and applied to public health practice. As our health care system is restructured and there are new advances in technology and genetics, a focus on providing care that is ethical and respects human rights is needed. Public health nurses can be in the forefront of providing care that reflects an ethical base and a rights-based approach to practice with populations.
Given the incidence of breast cancer in the United States, the results highlight women in need of interventions to help them understand the value of cancer screening behaviors.
Few studies of utilization and satisfaction with prenatal care services have been conducted internationally. In this study, utilization and satisfaction with prenatal care services in St. Petersburg, Russia were examined using Aday and Andersen's (1974) A Framework for the Study of Access to Medical Care. This study was conducted under the auspices of the European Region, World Health Organization (WHO) Healthy Cities Project, which promotes a community-based intersectoral approach to meeting health needs. The convenience sample included 397 women with uncomplicated pregnancies and normal deliveries, representing an 86% response rate. Multiple regression and path analysis found significant predictors of prenatal care utilization and satisfaction. They were different, however, from those posited in the theoretical model. This indicates that Aday and Andersen's health care services model is specific to the U. S. health care system, where it originated. The Russian health care system has been and remains different from that of the United States. If the reformed Russian health care system takes on aspects of the U. S. health care system, the utility of Aday and Andersen's theoretical model may change.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.