Table 2.
Sector | Key Challenges as Reported by Participants | Selected Quotes |
---|---|---|
State government |
|
“The government is also facing difficulties in trying to manage with the restricted budget they have […] I think what they did is probably something that would need to be done for them in managing and ensuring that healthcare is prioritized for Malaysian citizens.” (I09)
“In theory, public health providers should provide treatment regardless of legal status; but they also have to follow the mandate from the ministry and immigration laws of the country. This places them in a difficult position when dealing with undocumented asylum-seekers.” (I03) |
Civil society |
|
“[NGO services] are very limited and it’s not sustainable because people in the NGO clinic, they change and the manpower usually is very limited.” (I01)
“I think what’s lacking is people who are a bit more vocal […] of course, we can’t expect our health NGOs to be very local, given the fact that they’d be worried about jeopardizing their own operations as well […] and the limitation of the human resources and time that they have […] that’s limiting a little bit of what they can do, outside of just delivering health services.” (I09) |
UNHCR |
|
“Yeah, I think the budget [of UNHCR] does not commensurate with the growth in the population and the […] amount of assistance that’s required. Yes, there is the insurance, but it’s still a challenge.” (I09)
“I think one of the really big issues is the budget was cut yearly by the United Nations. The reason they say […] there are more refugees in Europe, so the money is all going to Europe, but they didn’t realize, that even though Malaysian refugees is not that critical, but they still need financial help, because they are not legally working in Malaysia, so I don’t think the cutting budget should continue.” (I05) “[…] the cost of supporting cases, of course, have more than doubled […] the number of requests for assistance has, of course, increased, because what they used to be able to afford is no longer affordable, so they’re asking UNHCR to top up or pay the whole sum for even simple things like delivery which they used to be able to afford.” (I09) |
Refugee communities |
|
“Some MCH (mother-and-child health) clinics are like that, if they don’t have a document, you can’t register [the patient], so I don’t know what to do, so I say, ’Go and shop around and look for other MCHs that will accept you for the community card.’” (I06)
“[For] health promotion, I mentioned that we can go through community leaders, but then community leaders also have limited reaching area. They only know the people they know, but then there are many people that are not under the community leader radar. There are some communities that don’t even have a leader.” (I07) |
Private sector |
|
“[…] the refugee group or the so-called foreign group may have less affordability to access the private setting.” (I07)
“It’s a good emergency sort of insurance policy, but the uptake is not that good […] the coverage is not that high because, some of them, first of all, they may not be aware.” (I01) |
Academia |
|
“To do research, you must get money […] [Funders] will never give you money for [refugee] work. They won’t. That’s what stops the lecturers from getting or working with UNHCR […] Oh, you’ll never get the funding for it.” (I04) |