Time, space and health: using the life history calendar methodology applied to mobility in a medical-humanitarian organisation

Glob Health Action. 2022 Dec 31;15(1):2128281. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2022.2128281.

Abstract

In the medical humanitarian context, the challenging task of collecting health information from people on the move constitutes a key element to identifying critical health care needs and gaps. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), during its long history of working with migrants, refugees and mobile populations in different contexts, has acknowledged how crucial it is to generate detailed context-related data on migrant and refugee populations in order to adapt the response interventions to their needs and circumstances. In 2019, the Brazilian Medical Unit/MSF developed the Migration History Tool (MHT), an application based on the life history method which was created in close dialogue with field teams in order to respond to information needs emerging from medical operations in mobile populations. The tool was piloted in two different contexts: firstly, among mobile populations transiting and living in Beitbridge and Musina, at the Zimbabwe-South Africa border; and, secondly, among Venezuelan migrants and refugees in Colombia. This article describes the implementation of this innovative method for collecting quantitative retrospective data on mobility and health in the context of two humanitarian interventions. The results have proven the flexibility of the methodology, which generated detailed information on mobility trajectories and on the temporalities of migration in two different contexts. It also revealed how health outcomes are not only associated with the spatial dimensions of movement, but also with the temporalities of mobility trajectories.

Keywords: Migration; humanitarian intervention; information; methodology; social determinants of health.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Organizations
  • Refugees*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • South Africa
  • Transients and Migrants*

Grants and funding

This manuscript results from the analysis of operational research data and activities for the provision of medical health care developed by MSF in Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Colombia. The organization covered all activity costs during project implementation and those derived from the production of this document.