The refugees and health crisis: migration policy management and government response to Afghan migrants.

Publication date: Feb 07, 2025

The health crisis during the pandemic and its aftermath have caused multidimensional shifts within the economic and societal structure for refugees and other marginalized communities. Many countries have implemented programs to cater for the additional needs of underserved populations, but refugees and other migrants are usually not covered by these programs. In this context, this study attempts to explore the impact of the crisis on Afghan refugee’s vulnerability and the relationship between health services, relief packages, and risk communication. The proposed model is tested with 427 Afghan refugees’ families from five major cities of Pakistan. The partial least squares structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM) is used to test the vulnerability significance with the crisis and government response in facilities. The research findings show that post pandemic economic crisis, the access to health services, relief packages and risk communication is directly associated with Afghan refugees’ vulnerability (β = 0. 471, β = 0. 501, β = 0. 271 & β = 0. 259). Notably the relationship between post pandemic economic crisis and Afghan refugees’ vulnerability is mediated by limited access to health services and unavailability of relief packages. Unavailability of relief packages and lack of risk communication mediates the effect of refugees’ crisis on vulnerability. Overall, the proposed model explains 63. 3% of the variance in Afghan refugees’ vulnerability with government services. It indicates that Afghan refugees are unable to access relief packages, and there is insufficient communication of risk factors. The lack of government facilities is due to the harder closed-door policy of the Pakistani government which has worsened the vulnerability of Afghan refugees after the sudden victory of the Taliban in Afghanistan. In spite of hosting Afghan refugees for the last forty years, the government of Pakistan has no clear systemized policy towards Afghans till now. The paper offers practical policy implications as there is a need for migration policy management combining flexibility and friendliness cooperation to provide government services to refugees. Government preparedness has to include refugee populations in responses to emergencies and look into the current state of new Afghan refugees’ flows, and take further extension in the continuation of migration management.

Open Access PDF

Concepts Keywords
Pandemic Adult
Refugees Afghanistan
Taliban COVID-19
Underserved Female
Government facilities
Health disparities
Health Services Accessibility
Humans
Male
Pakistan
Refugees
Refugees
Social protection
Transients and Migrants
Vulnerable Populations

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH access to health services
disease MESH emergencies
pathway REACTOME Reproduction
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH COVID 19
drug DRUGBANK Tretamine
drug DRUGBANK Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease IDO country
disease IDO susceptibility
disease IDO facility
drug DRUGBANK Aspartame
disease IDO host
disease MESH uncertainty
disease MESH infectious diseases
drug DRUGBANK Serine
drug DRUGBANK L-Valine
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
disease IDO intervention
drug DRUGBANK Indoleacetic acid
disease MESH privacy
disease IDO process
disease MESH Shock
disease MESH deviant behavior
drug DRUGBANK Silver
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
disease IDO production
disease IDO history
drug DRUGBANK O1-Methyl-4-Deoxy-4-Thio-Beta-D-Glucose
disease MESH Health disparities

Original Article

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)