Authors

  1. Turin, Tanvir C. PhD
  2. Haque, Sarika BSc
  3. Chowdhury, Nashit MBBS
  4. Yeasmin, Fahmida PhD
  5. Ferdous, Mahzabin MBBS
  6. Rashid, Ruksana MSc
  7. Rumana, Nahid PhD
  8. Rahman, Nafiza MSc
  9. Rahman, Afsana MBBS
  10. Lasker, Mohammad MBBS
  11. Chowdhury, Mohammad PhD

Abstract

Research around probable solutions to immigrants accessing health care in Canada is not extensive, and the perspective of immigrant communities on priorities and potential solutions has not been captured effectively. The purpose of this article is to describe a research initiative that involved grassroots community members as producers of research priorities on primary care access issues. This study aimed to seek input from an immigrant community in Calgary, Canada. Members of the Bangladeshi community of Calgary were asked through a survey to rank 10 predefined primary care access topics as to what they felt constituted priorities for solution-oriented research (1, highest; 10, lowest). We used frequencies and percentages to describe the participant demographics. Ratings of preferred research themes were analyzed on the basis of relative weighted priority rank. We received 432 responses: 51.2% female; 58.9% aged 36 to 55 years; 90.5% had university-level education; 46.2% immigrated to Canada between 10 and 19 years ago; 82.5% employed full/part-time or self-employed. Lack of resources, lack of knowledge, health care cost, and workplace-related barriers were among the top-ranked topics identified as solution-oriented research priorities. Through partnerships and reciprocal learning, public input can increase insider perspectives to help develop interventions that align with the needs of community members.