Hospitalization Experience of Muslim Migrants in Hospitals in Southern Spain—Communication, Relationship with Nurses and Culture. A Focused Ethnography
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants and Context
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Management and Data Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. MPs Facing a Lack of Communication from Nurses
3.1.1. The Importance of Communication. Actively Seeking Tools to Overcome the Lack of Communication
When you are with the nurse, she speaks on one side and you speak on the other. You can only point to where it hurts but you cannot explain; she will not know what happens to you.(M17)
Not speaking the language has an effect. For instance, I have a good command of Spanish and I can socialize more with people, I ask questions and so on. As a result, they spend more time with me; they see what I am like. However, if someone cannot speak the language, he will be isolated in his own world and people will say and this guy, what is he doing? What is he thinking? And they start judging him because he is quiet. I think this aspect has a strong influence on discrimination.(M12)
No, I did not say that; it was my sister who spoke. The husband went with her.(H6)
Those who came to visit me, they translated the things that the doctor said that I did not understand.(H10)
Communication is not easy, even with a friend who translates, because those who do not work in the hospital do not know how to explain things well.(H13)
In the hospital, the nurse told me to look for a fellow countryman who speaks good Spanish, that she will come back and he can explain everything to her.(H10)
There was no problem; it was all drawn.(M10)
Yes, he spoke like you; he understood, like I do now. He spoke slowly and he gestured to me.(H2)
When I left, they gave me a book in Arabic and Spanish about the child’s things.(M8)
3.1.2. When there is no Translation, the Rights of the Patient are Violated. Professionals only Complete the Tasks and Leave
(In the delivery room)At first, I told them that I do not understand anything and they left me as I was. They have done their job but they have not explained anything to me, as I do not speak Spanish and I do not understand anything. That bothered me a lot.(M3)
They told me to sign but I do not know what I put on paper.(H14)
When the nurses talk to you and they see that you do not speak at all, then they do their job and leave.(H8)
She does not talk to me; she does not ask me about the stitches and she hurts me. I scream and she stops.(M8, patient who speaks Spanish)
The truth is that I did not understand anything but I trusted that what they did was the best for me.(H14)
When I have felt ill and I have been in the hospital, I have trusted the whites, the Spaniards.(H16)
3.2. Discriminatory Relationships in the Hospital
3.2.1. No Problems with Interacting
Regardless of being poor or rich, you are in the hands of professionals. (…) I trusted that what they did was the best for me.(H2)
I called and got what I needed. They gave me many medicines that made me heal well.(M9)
3.2.2. Softening Discrimination. Satisfaction with Treatment and Justification of Discrimination
Yes, a nurse disrespected me and called me mora. I told her, “Look, my mother killed two lambs to call me... (the MP’s name).” I fought, yes, yes, because she said, “That one, the mora”; she said it like that (makes a gesture of contempt) and it made me angry because that cannot be.(M5)
Some nurses seem to be fed up with treating people; they have a lot of work and that is why sometimes they can respond poorly.(H3)
Some things they do without realizing it.(M14)
This nurse, it was noticeable, did not approach me. I preferred to wait until another one came by when I was in pain because if she came, she would talk to me badly.(M2)
I understand that the majority of Moroccans who pass through the hospital come from farmhouses, many of them without water and arrive at the hospital in a state... a little dirty and the nurse is a little disgusted by people who arrive like this.(H5)
3.3. Living One’s Own Culture. Islam in the Hospital
3.3.1. Variability in Practices
I am a Muslim and I do Ramadan and all that, although I do not pray or go to the mosque.(H3)
There are Muslims who pray; there are Muslims who do not pray.(M13)
It is hospital food; it is not the food from your home. They bring you food. You are not obligated to eat it. You eat. I did not like it but you have to eat.(H7)
No, I do not care. As long as they treat me well… what will you do? It is fine.(M5)
For women, we think that a woman will be better than a male doctor. […] I am afraid to take my wife and that it be a male doctor. That may be a little closed-minded, right?(M7)
My religion says to do it but each one is free to do what she wants. As a Muslim, I like to wear it.(M3)
I wear the veil some days and not others. For example, when I come to the hospital, I like to wear it.(M11)
If you wear the burqa, you do not see your eyes. As Muslim, we would support it if that practice disappeared.(H2)
3.3.2. Religion and Traditions are in the Background at the Hospital
No, not in the hospital. When it was over, the operation, yes, I prayed at home.(H6)
If you are sick, you have to be cured. If it is a man, you have to see him; it is necessary. Childbirth is something natural and “merciful”; you cannot be embarrassed.(M16)
At birth, they took my headscarf and gave me a cap that was attached to my nightgown, which was fine with me and after I gave birth, I put my headscarf back on.(M3)
3.3.3. Nurses and the Culture of their MPs
It seems to me that they have suspected that I am Muslim. I think they think that all black people are Muslims. (H2)
They have not asked about these things. This point should be included.(H15)
When she came the first time, she asked me, “What food do you want?”(H4)
I think not, that they do not show interest in finding out, in knowing, talking about that, about diet, about everything.(M6)
Some do not understand the cultural things and do not want to understand.(H3)
3.3.4. We are Less Different than it Seems
For the Moroccans, the family is always with the patient for what they need. That is the same as you; the Spanish are the same as us.(H4)
We like to be in the street and talk to neighbors; we are less different than it seems.(M4)
3.4. What Improvements would you like to see in Hospitals?
I do not have anything to say. I was sick and I went to the hospital to heal and they healed me. That is what matters; nothing more.(H7)
I am not the one who should say that. What can I say?(M10)
Something can be improved: there is a church in the hospital, [...] and I asked him if there was a mosque and he told me that there was only a church. If they create a place, even if it is two meters by two, where the door can be closed and it can be quiet….(H19)
I would like to have an official interpreter from the hospital who could explain to me well what I suffer from and how I have to take care of myself… that knows my culture and about the medicine.(M2)
Improve humane treatment, so that they do not see us as something strange... that they see us as like anyone else, that they deepen their understanding of the treatment given to immigrants.(H2)
To know if the Muslim is bad or good, one must study religion.(H18)
The first thing is time. They are always in a hurry. [...] Patience... patience for both - the staff and those of us who are sick.(H3)
The same nurse must attend too many. They need to hire more.(M15)
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Implications for Practice
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Code | Gender | Interview Language | Age | Country of Birth | Speaks Spanish | Administrative Situation | Religious Beliefs/Practices |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
H1 | Male | Spa-Fr | 39 | Mali | Yes | Undocum | Practicing |
H2 | Male | Wolof | 34 | Senegal | No | Undocum | Practicing |
H3 | Male | Spanish | 43 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | Believer |
H4 | Male | Spanish | 43 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
H5 | Male | Spanish | 52 | Morocco | Yes | Community | Practicing |
H6 | Male | Spa-Arab | 53 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
H7 | Male | Spa-Port | 48 | Guinea-Bissau | Yes | Resident | Believer |
H8 | Male | Arabic | 39 | Morocco | No | Undocum | Practicing |
H9 | Male | Spanish | 25 | Mali | Knows some | Undocum | Practicing |
H10 | Male | Arabic | 33 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
H11 | Male | Spanish | 33 | The Gambia | Yes | Undocum | Believer |
H12 | Male | Spanish | 31 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | None |
H13 | Male | Wolof | 26 | Senegal | No | Undocum | Believer |
H14 | Male | Wolof | 22 | Senegal | No | Undocum | Practicing |
H15 | Male | Spanish | 36 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | Believer |
H16 | Male | Bambara | 21 | Mali | No | Undocum | Believer |
H17 | Male | Arabic | 40 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
H18 | Male | Spanish | 33 | Mali | Yes | Community | Believer |
H19 | Male | French | 20 | Guinea (Conakry) | No | Undocum | Practicing |
H2O | Male | Arabic | 32 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
M1 | Female | Spanish | 35 | Guinea (Bissau) | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
M2 | Female | Mandaic | 32 | Guinea (Bissau) | No | Community | Believer |
M3 | Female | Arabic | 32 | Morocco | No | Undocum | Practicing |
M4 | Female | Spanish | 28 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
M5 | Female | Spanish | 58 | Morocco | Yes | Undocum | Believer |
M6 | Female | Spanish | 37 | Spain (Melilla) | Yes | Community | None |
M7 | Female | Spanish | 38 | Palestine | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
M8 | Female | Spanish | 38 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Believer |
M9 | Female | Spa-Arabic | 22 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
M10 | Female | Spa-Arabic | 33 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
M11 | Female | Spa-Arabic | 35 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
M12 | Female | Spanish | 22 | Algeria | Yes | Undocum | Practicing |
M13 | Female | Spanish | 43 | Morocco | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
M14 | Female | French | 41 | Senegal | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
M15 | Female | Spanish | 38 | Senegal | Yes | Resident | Practicing |
M16 | Female | Spa-Arabic | 31 | Morocco | Knows some | Resident | Practicing |
M17 | Female | Arabic | 33 | Morocco | No | Undocum | Believer |
Thematic categories | Themes | Codes |
---|---|---|
MPs face a lack of communication from nurses | The importance of communication. Actively seeking tools to overcome the lack of communication | Using informal translators. Seeking other solutions to the lack of communication |
When there is no translation, the rights of the patient are violated. Professionals only completing tasks and leaving | Nurses who do not care. Lack of professionalism. If you are a foreigner, you do not speak. Information is not necessary because of trust in the health system and its professionals | |
Discriminatory relationships in the hospital | No problems when interacting | Acknowledgement of the care and available resources |
Softening discrimination. Satisfaction with treatment and justification of discrimination | Justifying discriminatory behavior. Blaming migrants. Minimizing discrimination. Reasons for discrimination | |
Living one’s own culture. Islam in the hospital | Variability in practices | Prayer |
Religion and traditions in the hospital are in the background | Food | |
Different care by gender | ||
The hijab | ||
Condemnation of radical behavior | ||
Nurses and the culture of their MPs | Nurses presuppose religious affiliation. They do not ask about patients’ cultural patterns. From ignorance to cultural commitment | |
We are less different than it seems. | ||
Improvements the participants would like to see in hospitals | No requirement | Having a place of worship. Translators/cultural mediators. More cultural knowledge by nurses. Same treatment as any other user |
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Plaza del Pino, F.J.; Cala, V.C.; Soriano Ayala, E.; Dalouh, R. Hospitalization Experience of Muslim Migrants in Hospitals in Southern Spain—Communication, Relationship with Nurses and Culture. A Focused Ethnography. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17082791
Plaza del Pino FJ, Cala VC, Soriano Ayala E, Dalouh R. Hospitalization Experience of Muslim Migrants in Hospitals in Southern Spain—Communication, Relationship with Nurses and Culture. A Focused Ethnography. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(8):2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17082791
Chicago/Turabian StylePlaza del Pino, Fernando Jesús, Verónica C. Cala, Encarnación Soriano Ayala, and Rachida Dalouh. 2020. "Hospitalization Experience of Muslim Migrants in Hospitals in Southern Spain—Communication, Relationship with Nurses and Culture. A Focused Ethnography" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 8: 2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17082791
APA StylePlaza del Pino, F. J., Cala, V. C., Soriano Ayala, E., & Dalouh, R. (2020). Hospitalization Experience of Muslim Migrants in Hospitals in Southern Spain—Communication, Relationship with Nurses and Culture. A Focused Ethnography. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(8), 2791. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17082791