Interviews with NSW Refugee Health explain why health services are essential for successful settlement.
Transcript
Music
Narrator:
                  Good health is an important part of successful settlement for refugees.
Woman:
                  The Refugee Health Service is a state wide service. We offer a variety of  services for newly arrived and longer settled refugees including clinical  services, advocacy, research and education.
Girl:
                  I’ve got an appointment with Dr Shelby.
Woman:
                  No problem.
Woman:
                  Australia has got one of the best health systems in the world bar none  particularly because of our universal access under Medicare. However, it is confusing  and it can be very different to health systems overseas.
Woman:
                  Your country of birth, please.
Girl:
                  Iraq.
Woman:
                  Language spoken at home?
Girl:
                  Arabic.
Woman:
                  Explaining the immunisation schedule and the issues around immunising children  before they go to school; explaining how to access the public dental system...
Music
Woman:
                  The Refugee Health Nurse Program operates in Sydney, we run eleven clinics from  St George out to the Blue Mountains. We have a very close working relation with  the Settlement Services International which is the service provider for newly  arrived refugees coming into Sydney. They refer all their on-arrival clients to  the Refugee Health Nurse Program. And we commit to seeing them in our clinics  within one to two weeks of arrival.
Music
Woman:
                  We do a physical health assessment, a psychological health assessment, a dental  health assessment because health is more than just a medical assessment. Also,  we’re able to link newly arrived refugees into the myriad of services that NSW  Health provides. All the under fives we send to our Early Childhood Nursing  Services because they’re the experts around child development. And there’s  often a lot of concern from parents about the effect of the refugee journey may  have had on their children.
Music
Woman:
                  The other issue is around people’s psychological health. And for a lot of  refugees they have experienced things that you and I could only imagine or  something we only may see on television. So, how people recover from that  trauma, particularly people that may have experienced quite severe physical  torture, is really important for their onward settlement journey into  Australia. So, we want to make sure that people are in the best possible state  of health to start their new life in Australia.
