VUB research explores barriers and strategies in early care planning among first-generation Moroccan and Turkish migrants

How are the first generation of migrants from Türkiye and Morocco who came to Belgium in the 1960s and 70s dealing with early care planning? Hakki Demirkapu from the Department of General Practice and Chronic Care at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) carried out an extensive investigation.

“My aim was to understand and analyse these people’s views of early care planning. What factors influence them to participate in the process or not? We also looked at the role of family, given their important place within these communities,” says Demirkapu. “It was striking that language barriers play a major role in discussing sensitive issues such as early care planning. To overcome this, we carried out the interviews in the respondents’ native language.”

 

Demirkapu, who speaks Turkish, worked with a colleague who speaks Moroccan Arabic.

“This approach often provided us with deep and emotional interviews, as well as detailed insights. Besides language, we identified several other obstacles, such as lack of knowledge about early care planning, anxiety about making the wrong decision due to low literacy, lack of organisation and taboos around talking about illness and death. Care providers often incorrectly assume that family members will make all the decisions or that the older people themselves do not require early care planning. In fact, many older people welcome conversations about their future care, as long as they are well-informed,” says Demirkapu.

Initially, many respondents, particularly those of Moroccan origin, considered early care planning to be unnecessary for religious reasons. However, after receiving detailed information in their native language, most of them changed their opinion.

Demirkapu: “There is a clear need for awareness-raising campaigns and educational programmes about early care planning, aimed at older people with a migration background. So we will continue to work on developing video material in the native language of these groups and easy-to-understand tools such as pictograms and card games. These could be used, for example, at information evenings organised with cultural associations and community and religious leaders. This kind of practical solution can encourage older people to talk about their end-of-life wishes and can help care providers to facilitate conversations about early care planning.”

 


Contact

Dr Hakki Demirkapu
Department of General Practice, VUB
Hakki.demirkapu@vub.be
0470 12 24 51

Koen Stein

Koen Stein

Perscontact wetenschap & onderzoek

 

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About Press - Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Vrije Universiteit Brussel is an internationally oriented university in Brussels, the heart of Europe. By providing excellent research and education on a human scale, VUB wants to make an active and committed contribution to a better society.

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The Vrije Universiteit Brussel assumes its scientific and social responsibility with love and decisiveness. That’s why VUB launched the platform De Wereld Heeft Je Nodig – The World Needs You, which brings together ideas, actions and projects based on six Ps. The first P stands for People, because that’s what it’s all about: giving people equal opportunities, prosperity, welfare, respect. Peace is about fighting injustice, big and small, in the world. Prosperity combats poverty and inequality. Planet stands for actions on biodiversity, climate, air quality, animal rights... With Partnership, VUB is looking for joint actions to make the world a better place. The sixth and last P is for Poincaré, the French philosopher Henri Poincaré, from whom VUB derives its motto that thinking should submit to nothing except the facts themselves. VUB is an ‘urban engaged university’, strongly anchored in Brussels and Europe and working according to the principles of free research.

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