Impacts of the Interim Federal Health Program reforms: A stakeholder analysis of barriers to health care access and provision for refugees.
Antonipillai, Valentina ; Baumann, Andrea ; Hunter, Andrea 等
Impacts of the Interim Federal Health Program reforms: A stakeholder analysis of barriers to health care access and provision for refugees.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees reports that
there are 65.3 million forcibly displaced migrants worldwide. (1) Of
these migrants, 21.3 million are refugees seeking asylum from the
endemic violence and human rights violations in their homelands. (1) In
2015, Canada opened its doors to 32 000 refugees, including
government-assisted refugees (GARs), privately sponsored refugees (PSRs)
and refugee claimants, all of whom are eligible to receive health care
coverage under Canada's Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP)
policy. (2) Prior to 2012, comprehensive health care coverage was
available under the IFHP for GARs, PSRs, protected persons, refugee
claimants and refused refugee claimants with negative decisions under
appeal or review, or those awaiting deportation. (3) Government-funded
health care insurance included basic health care, supplementary health
care and drug coverage, to promote equitable treatment of vulnerable
individuals, regardless of claim approval or country of origin. (3)
In 2012, changes to Canada's refugee health policy were
introduced through the IFHP, significantly reducing health care coverage
for certain refugee populations and resulting in the loss of insured
medical care and hospital service provisions for many who had previously
been covered. (4-6) Concerns for refugees and claimants, voiced by
Canadian health care organizations and professionals, prompted the
Federal Court of Canada to reassess the impact of the IFHP changes.
(7,8) Within one month of the introduction of the 2012 IFHP reforms,
eight national health associations expressed their apprehensions and
opposition to the changes. (7,9,10) On February 25, 2013, a legal
challenge launched by the Canadian Doctors for Refugee Care with the
Canadian Association for Refugee Lawyers was successfully appealed to
the Federal Court of Canada. (11) The court deemed that the IFHP reforms
violated section 12 of the Canadian Charter of Rights, constituting
"cruel and unusual treatment" of vulnerable refugee
populations. (12) Furthermore, the court ruled that the 2012 IFHP cuts
were "of no force or effect", encouraging the implementation
of "health insurance coverage that is equivalent to that to
which... [refugees were] entitled under the provisions of the pre-2012
IFHP". (12)
On November 4, 2014, the Federal Government of Canada announced the
introduction of "Temporary Measures for the IFHP". (13) This
new program reform was not a full reversal of the 2012 cuts, as ordered
by the Federal Court, but it did restore some key health services to
select categories of refugee populations through a more complex system
of health coverage, in which six types of coverage, instead of three,
were provided (13) (see Table 1). Moreover, health care coverage gaps
continued to exist for refugees and refugee claimants under the new
program, resulting in the formulation of provincial government-led
programs and clinics for newcomers aimed at bridging the health care
access gap for refugees. (14,15)
This study addresses the gap in the literature regarding the impact
of the 2014 IFHP reforms on health care access and provision for
refugees and refugee claimants by examining stakeholder views.
Stakeholders possess critical insight that brings information to the
deliberation process of policy, aiding policymakers to make decisions
that are more likely to avoid unintended consequences and to fit into
existing contexts. As policy-making is an information-intensive process,
stakeholders who possess tacit knowledge of the current situation
possess value. (16) Furthermore, policy effectiveness can be judged
using several methods, one of which is to examine the acceptability of a
policy by stakeholders. (17) The impact of refugee health policy is of
wide significance, given the increasing volume of displaced people
seeking refuge in Canada and around the world. (1) Examining the IFHP
reforms is important for refugee-serving providers, organizations and
policymakers, as the study contextualizes the problem of introducing
reforms to refugee health policy and reveals the subsequent complexities
involved in accessing and providing health care for refugees and refugee
claimants.
METHODS
Semi-structured key informant interviews were conducted with 23
stakeholders. Using a stakeholder identification framework, (18) four
stakeholder groups were identified: policy-makers and government
officials (PG), professionals and practitioners in the field of refugee
health (PP), refugee-serving civil society organizations (CSO) and
refugees and refugee claimants (RRC). Policy-makers and government
officials were represented at the national, provincial and local levels.
Refugees and refugee claimants were included if they arrived in Canada
between 2012 and 2015, having experienced the IFHP reforms. This
stakeholder category included Convention refugees, (19) refugee
claimants, as well as claimants who were refused or were ineligible for
refugee status within the time period. The RRC participants were from
designated * and non-designated countries of origin, spanning three
continents: Africa, Asia and Europe (see Appendix A).
Ethics approval was obtained from the Hamilton Integrated Research
Ethics Board. Purposive sampling methodology was used to recruit key
stakeholders in consultation with experts in the field of refugee health
and policy. Stakeholders were sampled if they were affected by or able
to influence the IFHP policy process. (20) Interviews were conducted
between May 2015 and August 2015. As nearly 50% of refugees are received
by and resettled in Ontario, (21) the majority of stakeholders were
interviewed across various cities within the province. Interview guides
were constructed in consultation with experts in refugee health and
qualitative research at McMaster University. The interview style and
probes were developed to promote a conversation with stakeholders during
the interview, maintaining a "conversation with a purpose"
style using an openended approach to gather data. (22) Interviews lasted
20-90 minutes and were recorded. All 23 digital recordings were securely
stored and transcribed by the primary investigator (VA).
A stakeholder analysis was conducted by systematically gathering
and analyzing qualitative data to obtain insight into stakeholder
positions, interests and influences regarding the 2014 IFHP reforms. To
understand stakeholder experiences as a result of the policy reforms, a
phenomenological approach was employed to analyze stakeholder
perceptions. (23,24) Themes were abstracted using a constant comparative
approach with QSR International NVivo 10. Positions of stakeholders and
barriers to providing and accessing health care for refugee populations
emerged. The coding process incorporated both a priori codes based on
the literature and inductive codes derived from the data. Specifically,
data analysis was guided by a modified version of the Health Care Access
Barrier model, including cognitive, structural and financial barriers,
(25) with the addition of socio-political barriers (see Figure 1). (26)
Moreover, a stakeholder map was generated to analyze the relationship
between stakeholders' positions on the IFHP 2014 reforms and their
ability to influence policy. (27) The quality of the results was
confirmed by verifying rigour through triangulation, thick description
and NVivo 10 audit trial. (28)
RESULTS
Several common themes emerged from the perceptions of refugee
health stakeholders regarding barriers to accessing and providing health
care for refugee populations during the 2014 IFHP reforms. Only four
barriers to health care access were common across all four stakeholder
groups: lack of awareness and miscommunication, lack of continuous and
comprehensive care, negative political discourse and increased costs of
care.
Cognitive barrier: Lack of awareness and miscommunication
A lack of awareness and miscommunication about the IFHP was a
barrier to the provision of health care for refugees and refugee
claimants. The implementation of the new Temporary Measures for the IFH
Program on November 4, 2014, involved no efforts by the federal
government to facilitate awareness except by listing coverage details on
the official website. Lack of efforts to implement complex plans
resulted in persisting confusion initiated by the 2012 IFHP
retrenchments as to refugee patient eligibility for services. According
to a stakeholder,
"The government is doing the base minimum as opposed to doing
the right thing. The implementation has been terrible because there has
not been any significant communication that is actually going to the
providers, or to the refugee lawyers, or to the refugee-serving
organizations, or to the refugees themselves, because confusion means
that less people will know that they are eligible and confusion will
mean that less providers will know what is eligible and therefore, the
end result will be that refugee claimants will not have access."
(PG2)
The confusion and complexity of coverage plans deterred providers
from offering services covered under the program. One physician
summarized the impact, stating,
"Physicians who accept IFH a year ago still are not accepting
it now and part of that is although there is increased scope of
insurance coverage many people just don't understand it ... [the
coverage plans] are so complicated, so people often get turned away in
private offices, or be asked to sign forms assuming responsibility for
financial costs ... I think for those who understand it, it's
lovely to know that children now have the same coverage that they had in
the past, but if you survey a lot of health care workers I'd be
surprised if they actually understood that." (PP2)
Moreover, a lack of IFHP awareness exists among refugees and
claimants. According to a refugee-serving provider,
"People are not aware of what's going on especially with
so many changes ... I cannot name you one client out of these 300 or 400
files that came here and knew that [the IFHP] is their health
coverage." (PP6)
The lack of awareness limited refugees' ability to understand
or question the circumstances of their care. As one refugee stakeholder
indicated, "We don't know why we pay for services now, because
first everything is covered and then in 2012, after then, everything was
paying, it was the system." (RRC2)
Structural barrier: Lack of continuous and comprehensive care
Most participants expressed opposition to the reforms because there
was a lack of continuous and comprehensive care accessible to refugees
and refugee claimants. Refused refugee claimants and people applying for
pre-removal risk assessment did not have access to health care coverage.
(13) A key stakeholder relates an additional example of the impact of
discontinued coverage:
"Some people have trouble accessing [the IFHP] because they
fall into sort of the gray area between the application that they are
going to make as a refugee claimant and their actual arrival on Canadian
soil and so we have seen ... one gentleman who was in the hospital for a
week with no coverage and he didn't have coverage because he never
made it to his initial citizenship and immigration interview and so he
was falling into that gray area. We've had other people like that
but not so severe as that one gentleman who came up with a bill for
$20,000." (PP5)
Furthermore, privately sponsored refugees also experienced limited
health care coverage upon arrival in Canada. They are refugees
recognized by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, (29) yet
they only received basic health care coverage in Canada. This included
physician and hospital visits as well as diagnostic and laboratory
tests. (13) If they were in need of prescription medication or
supplementary care, they were only covered for these services if their
condition posed a threat to public health or public safety. The lack of
comprehensive care was expressed by the majority of stakeholders as a
barrier to appropriate access:
"[Those affected by the cuts] include people from such places
as Syria where there is no doubt that people are in need of protection,
and even those people are not getting medications covered. So if
somebody is coming from Syria, coming as a privately sponsored refugee
and they have cancer, it's too bad for you, your cancer medication
is not covered." (PP3)
Socio-political barrier: Political discourse
Many stakeholders recognized that "Canada is a nation of
immigrants and refugees", yet throughout the political discourse,
actors inappropriately referred to refugee claimants as queue jumpers.
Interviewed stakeholders explained the impacts of the negative political
discourse on accessing health care:
"There are two different lines--it's [the discourse]
conflating immigration policy with refugee policy and rules on purpose
and ... [it] feeds that kind of mean spiritedness that wants to protect
Canada from some, you know, infusions of people breaking the rules and
so they're trying to make it sound like refugees are rule breakers
as opposed to legitimate immigrants that wait their turn and come when
asked." (PP3)
"The negative discourse results in social stigma around all
refugees and claimants labeling them as "bogus" without
consideration of those that are genuine in need of humanitarian aid.
Stigma discourages refugees and claimants from seeking help within the
Canadian health care system." (PG4)
"It's a program that we should be proud of and instead of
that, the political discourse ... is trying to tarnish it, as though
people are misusing the program, and that they're not entitled to
it, and that they're "bogus" and "failed". All
of these negative words make people feel embarrassed to seek help so,
that does affect access." (PG2)
Financial barrier: Increased costs
Stakeholders perceived the IFHP reforms over the past four years as
having increased provincial spending. According to policy-makers:
"As a provincial government, we looked at [all of the IFHP reforms]
as a setback in health care" (PG5); "Ontario is picking up the
costs so this is yet another insidious form of downloading." (PG4);
"The reforms have led to some refugees being denied care even
when they are eligible ... so the provinces have to pick up the health
care costs of people turning up uninsured in ERs in poorer health than
they could be if they actually received their services earlier."
(PG3)
Moreover, stakeholders reported that barriers to access included
the financial cost of care placed on refugees and claimants:
"We just saw a [refugee] woman who came 7 months'
pregnant. She came with malaria and was in the hospital for more than a
week and because she went to the emergency they put her in the ICU and
with all the specialists; they were sending her bills. Her bill is more
or less $30,000 and she doesn't have a way to pay." (CSO2)
Additionally, as a result of the lack of awareness among care
providers and refugees regarding the IFHP reforms, health care
organizations were spending more:
"What community health centres have been reporting is that
they are having to use their small amount of funding for refugees and
refugee claimants who may actually be able to access IFH." (PG3)
Stakeholder views
The majority of policy-makers expressed views opposing the 2014
changes to the IFHP (n = 4), indicating that the refugee health policy
changes did not ameliorate the devastating impact of the 2012
retrenchments experienced by refugee populations and, instead,
exacerbated the problem of access and provision of health care. Many of
the CSO and PP members held mixed views (n = 8). Participants who held
mixed views supported the restoration of some services in 2014 but
opposed the remaining limitations to health care under the IFHP. The
majority of refugees and refugee claimants (n = 4) supported the 2014
IFHP reforms because the insurance plan offered in 2014 provided more
coverage than their former plans, either in their country of origin or
the 2012 plan previously provided under the IFHP in Canada:
"If it covers some health care then, of course, I support it.
Nobody wants to pay so much money when they're sick. They have to
pay the bills, the rent and then their medical bills." (RRC2)
Altogether, eight stakeholders expressed opposing views to the 2014
reforms, on the basis that the changes did not alleviate problems posed
by the 2012 retrenchments; ten held mixed views, supporting the
reinstatement of some services in 2014 but opposing the remaining
cutbacks; four supported the 2014 reforms; and one did not comment. The
stakeholder map (Figure 2) displays participant positions and their
ability to influence the policy. The map categorizes participants as
low-priority, advocate, antagonistic or problematic stakeholders.
Low-priority individuals support the policy but cannot influence policy
change; advocates support the policy and have a high influence over the
policy process; problematic stakeholders oppose the policy but do not
have enough influence over it; and antagonistic stakeholders oppose the
policy and retain high influence to change it. (27) The majority of
stakeholders were categorized as antagonistic or problematic, which
reflects their opposing and mixed views regarding the 2014 changes to
the IFHP and reveals a need for stakeholder engagement before future
changes to the IFHP are implemented. Most stakeholders expressed
opposition or mixed views towards the reforms in 2014 as a result of the
aforementioned barriers to accessing and providing health care.
DISCUSSION
Principal findings
The majority of participants expressed opposing and mixed views
regarding the 2014 IFHP reforms and were subsequently categorized as
problematic and antagonistic stakeholders, because they believed that
the 2014 changes did not provide comprehensive coverage for refugees.
Instead, stakeholders conveyed the impression that with respect to the
2012 retrenchments these changes both created and contributed to
persisting barriers to health care access and provision for refugees.
This is a significant finding given that a wide spectrum of views were
included and only a small number of respondents represented refugee
advocates. Instead of promoting equitable health outcomes for a
vulnerable group of refugees, the 2014 IFHP reforms continued to
retrench coverage, which prevented refugees and claimants from having
access to continuous and comprehensive health care. Moreover, there was
a lack of awareness and miscommunication regarding the 2014 IFHP reform
content, eligibility criteria and coverage levels, which contributed to
the immense confusion among stakeholders. The resulting confusion led
some providers to refuse care to refugees or ask refugees to assume
financial costs for their health care, despite their inability to afford
them. As a result, refugee populations would delay seeking health care
until an emergency, at which point the province and health care
organizations would pay the costs. The negative political discourse also
contributed to stigma and tensions within communities that prevented
refugees from accessing health care.
Strengths and limitations
The diverse array of perceptions retrieved from a variety of
refugee health stakeholders is a notable strength of the study. The key
insights obtained from stakeholder perceptions have contributed to
understanding the IFHP reform landscape in 2014 for incoming refugee
populations and may explain long-term consequences faced by these
individuals after resettlement in Canada. The stakeholder analysis
provides point-in-time snapshots related to the IFHP 2014 reforms in
which stakeholder positions and influence are subject to change.
Therefore, a limitation of the study is that the data obtained are valid
only for the time during which they were collected. (30)
Implications
In contrast with non-public actors, such as professionals and
organizations that administered the changes to refugee health policy,
"institutional contours of the Canada Polity have led to a
situation in which publicly accountable actors tend to have less of a
national reach". (31) The government's minimal effort to
coordinate and consult with key stakeholders, including consumers
(refugees) and administrators, led to one of Canada's main
challenges regarding the implementation of effective refugee health care
reform. The paucity of stakeholder engagement in formulating and
implementing the IFHP reforms in 2012 and 2014 has resulted in
unintended consequences. Moreover, limited collaboration between federal
and provincial governments over the past four years has contributed to
the development of a fragmented system whereby provincial-led coverage
programs and clinics for newcomers attempted to bridge the gap. (15)
In response to the confusion created by the reforms and the
concerned voices of many stakeholders, the newly elected Liberal
Government of Canada restored comprehensive health care coverage for all
refugees and claimants through the IFHP on April 1, 2016. (32) In a
press release, the government acknowledged the barriers associated with
the IFHP retrenchments in 2012 and asserted that the IFHP restoration in
2016 "will improve the health outcomes of refugees and asylum
claimants, while also protecting public health for all Canadians.
Restoring the Interim Federal Health Program will also provide financial
relief to Canadians who privately sponsor refugees, reduce the
administrative burden faced by health-care professionals serving
refugees, and ease health-care funding pressure on provincial and
territorial governments". (33) To advance these objectives and to
avoid the unintended consequences resulting from reforming the IFHP in
the future, a commitment to data collection, information sharing and
evidence-informed policy-making with the inclusion of stakeholder
dialogues is necessary. Without this systematic and comprehensive
approach, reforming the IFHP will result in social and human costs, such
as those revealed by stakeholders in this study. Future research is
needed to assess the effectiveness of the IFHP in achieving equitable
health outcomes for refugee populations. Efforts that are aimed at
integrating insights from relevant research could both facilitate policy
change and, ultimately, improve health outcomes for vulnerable refugee
populations.
CONCLUSION
This study reveals key stakeholders' perception that the 2014
changes to refugee health policy exacerbated existing barriers and
generated additional barriers to access and provision of health care,
barriers that deter refugees and claimants from seeking health care and
consequently lead to health outcome disparities for a vulnerable
population. In Canada, policy-makers and government officials, civil
society organizations, and professionals and practitioners expressed
opposition to the 2014 IFHP reforms, reporting that the lack of
communication and awareness about the reforms created confusion, which
contributed to the protraction of the decreased provision of care for
refugees initiated by the 2012 retrenchments. The 2012 and 2014 IFHP
changes have led to the deterioration of health for some refugees, as
the reforms prevented access to comprehensive and continuous care.
Stakeholders emphasized that the negative political discourse and
increased financial burden prevented refugees from accessing health
care. Overall, the reforms to the IFHP in 2014 and 2012 transferred
refugee health costs and responsibility from federal to provincial
authorities, resulting in bureaucratic strains, inefficiencies and
overburdened administration, which contributed to confusion.
Canada's experience may provide other nations considering similar
regulations with insights into the impacts of retrenching refugee health
policy. Given the global refugee crisis, Canada's newly elected
government has renewed its focus on welcoming refugees and in 2016
reinstated the coverage provided through the pre-2012 IFHP. This was a
crucial step forward by the nation to remedy some of the consequences
endured by refugee populations, to reverse some of the costs incurred by
Canadian provinces and to provide an equitable response to refugees
seeking asylum during these troubled times.
doi: 10.17269/CJPH.108.5553
APPENDIX A
Table A1. Policy-maker and government official stakeholders
Stakeholder Description Influence Position
Policy-maker 1 Works at the policy, Moderate Opposed
research and
consulting level
regarding immigration
and refugee policy;
former government
official
Policy-maker 2 Government official High Opposed
involved in health at
the federal level
Policy-maker 3 Works at the policy Moderate-low Opposed
and research level
regarding refugee and
refugee claimant
immigration and
health policy
Policy-maker 4 Works at the policy Low Not disclosed
and public awareness
level of immigrant
and refugee policy
Policy-maker 5 Government official Moderate-low Opposed
formerly involved in
immigration and
refugee policy at the
provincial level
Table A2. Civil society organization stakeholders
Stakeholder Description Influence Position
Organization 1 Provides leadership programs, Moderate Mixed
training and employment
opportunities for refugees
and claimants
Organization 2 Provides settlement services Moderate Mixed
and primary health care for
refugees and refugee
claimants
Organization 3 Provides legal services in Low Mixed
counselling, immigration,
refugee and family law, and
aid for refugees and refugee
claimants
Organization 4 Provides primary health care, Moderate Opposed
employment and housing
services for refugees and
refugee claimants
Organization 5 Provides legal services for High Mixed
refugees and refugee
claimants, and public legal
education and law reform work
Organization 6 Provides settlement and Moderate Opposed
integration services for
refugee claimants
Table A3. Professional and practitioner stakeholders
Stakeholder Description Influence Position
Professional 1 Provides health care to Moderate Mixed
refugees and refugee
claimants
Professional 2 Provides health care to High Opposed
refugees and refugee
claimants
Professional 3 Provides settlement Low Mixed
services to refugees and
refugee claimants
Professional 4 Provides legal services Low Opposed
to refugees and refugee
claimants
Professional 5 Provides legal services High-moderate Mixed
to refugees and refugee
claimants
Professional 6 Provides settlement Low Mixed
services to refugees and
refugee claimants
Table A4. Refugee and refugee claimant stakeholder characteristics
Stakeholder Description Influence Position
Refugee 1 Refugee since February 2014 Low Supportive
from designated country of
origin *
Refugee 2 Refugee claimant since 2011 Low Supportive
from non-designated country of
origin ([dagger])
Refugee 3 Refugee claimant since 2009 Low Supportive
from designated country of
origin
Refugee 4 Refugee claimant since 2012 Low Mixed
and current Convention refugee
([double dagger]) from
non-designated country of
origin
Refugee 5 Failed refugee claimant in Low Mixed
2012, applied for humanitarian
and compassionate
consideration. Convention
refugee since 2015 May from
designated country of origin
Refugee 6 Convention refugee since Low Supportive
December 2013 from designated
country of origin
* Designated countries of origin are countries deemed by the Federal
Government to be places that do not normally produce refugees, and
that respect human rights and offer state protection. Refugees from
DCOs are subjected to shorter claim processing timelines, prohibited
from appealing failed refugee claims and, if their claim for refugee
status is denied, cannot reapply invoking humanitarian and
compassionate grounds for up to one year.
([dagger]) Non-designated countries of origin include countries that
are not deemed safe for return by refugees.
([double dagger]) Convention refugees are persons "owing to a
well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership of a particular social group or political
opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or,
due to such fear, is unwilling to avail him/herself of the
protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and
being outside the country where he/she normally lives, is unable or,
due to such fear, is unwilling to return to it." (19)
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Received: March 1, 2016
Accepted: April 21, 2017
Valentina Antonipillai, MSc, [1,2] Andrea Baumann, PhD, [2,3]
Andrea Hunter, MD, [4] Olive Wahoush, PhD, [2,3] Timothy O'Shea, MD
[5]
Author Affiliations
[1.] Health Policy PhD Program, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
[2.] Global Health, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
[3.] School of Nursing, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
[4.] Paediatrics, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
[5.] School of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
Correspondence: Valentina Antonipillai, Health Policy PhD Program,
McMaster University, Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and
Impact, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Tel: 905-525-9140,
E-mail: antoniv@mcmaster.ca
Conflict of Interest: None to declare.
* Designated countries of origin (DCOs) are countries deemed by the
Federal Government to be places that do not normally produce refugees
and that respect human rights and offer state protection. Refugees from
DCOs are subjected to shorter claim processing timelines, prohibited
from appealing failed refugee claims and, if their claim for refugee
status is denied, are unable to reapply invoking humanitarian and
compassionate grounds for up to one year.
Non-designated countries of origin are countries that are not
deemed safe for return by refugees.
Caption: Figure 1. Health care access and provision barriers
Caption: Figure 2. Stakeholder map: Influence vs. position
Table 1. Types of coverage associated with the 2014 reforms to the
IFHP
2014 Interim Federal Health Program reforms
Type of coverage Population receiving What does this mean?
coverage
Type 1: Basic, * Government assisted All health coverage
supplementary, and refugees: Resettled benefits provided
prescription drug refugees who are or
coverage were receiving
monthly income
support through the
Resettlement
Assistance Program
* Children (below 19
years of age)
* Victims of human
trafficking
* Individuals who
resettle in Canada
under the Citizenship
and Immigration
Minister's
humanitarian and
compassionate
considerations
Type 2: Basic and * Pregnant women Lack of supplementary
prescription drug coverage (vision and
coverage * Rejected refugee dental care)
claimants from non-
deportable countries
(Iraq, Afghanistan,
Congo, South Sudan,
Gaza, Somalia and
Syria)
Type 3: Basic and * Privately sponsored Lack of supplementary
Public Health and refugees coverage and limited
Public drug coverage
Safety (PHPS) * Active refugee
prescription drug claimants currently
coverage awaiting a claim
decision
* Protected persons
Type 4: PHPS basic * Ineligible refugee Lack of supplementary
coverage and PHPS claimants coverage, limited
prescription drug drug coverage and
coverage * Suspended refugee limited basic
claimants coverage
* Rejected refugee
claimants who can be
deported to country
of origin
* Refugee claimants
eligible to apply for
pre-removal risk
assessment
Type 5: Coverage for * Individual detained Not specified
persons detained by the Canadian
under the Immigration Border Services
and Refugee Agency
Protection Act
Type 6: Coverage for * All individuals who Only immigration
the immigration enter the country medical examination
medical examination without permanent is covered
resident status and
are provided with
temporary or no
immigration status
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