Refugee Services
By Amanda Jepson | Categories: | Comments Off on Refugee Services
Arizona has settled more than 110,000 refugees since 1981 and ranks in the top five states for refugee reception. Seventy-eight percent of those refugees relocate to Maricopa County, where Valleywise Health operates, in Phoenix. In response to the influx of refugees, Valleywise Health established the Women’s Refugee Health Clinic in 2008 to provide a culturally grounded, patient-centered medical home for the refugee community. In 2022, the clinic became part of the Valleywise Health Center for Refugee and Global Health. The center aims to assist refugees in navigating the U.S. health care system, including support with interpretation, insurance, housing, and day-to-day survival information.
The center provides comprehensive services via numerous clinics, including the Refugee Women’s Health Clinic, Refugee Pediatric Clinic, Family Medicine Refugee Clinic, McDowell Clinic for Individuals Living with HIV, Specialty Care Services, Behavioral Health Services, and Internal Medicine. Through outreach, the center mitigates structural barriers to care, including transportation, health literacy, continuum of care, and treatment adherence. Eighteen cultural health navigators work with clinical teams to coordinate all health-related activities daily. Valleywise Health allots an annual budget to the center and receives additional funding from foundations, including the Valleywise Health, Burton Family, Flinn, and Pakis Family foundations.
Community partnerships with the Arizona Department of Health Services, Department of Economic Security, State Refugee Resettlement Office, Maricopa County Department of Public Health, Arizona State University, health plans, and other refugee-serving organizations are key in service development, implementation, and dissemination.
In 2024, the center served 17,000 refugee patients, an increase of 1,000 over the previous year, from 71 countries. The center provided health literacy classes to more than 800 patients; adult refugee services to 1,437 men (including 243 who transitioned to self-efficacy in 2024), thanks to the program’s expansion into family medicine; and HIV and AIDS care to 880 adult refugees. Health care providers delivered 212 babies at the Refugee Women’s Health Clinic and installed more than 300 car seats for mothers who completed child safety classes. Additionally, the health center has seen a 33 percent increase in mental health screenings.