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Health professionals confront the intentional harms of indefinite immigration detention: an Australian overview, evaluation of alternative responses and proposed strategy

Michael Dudley (School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Kensington, Australia)
Peter Young (Sydney, Australia)
Louise Newman (Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Fran Gale (School of Social Sciences, University of Western Sydney, Penrith, Australia)
Rohanna Stoddart (Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia)

International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care

ISSN: 1747-9894

Article publication date: 17 December 2020

Issue publication date: 18 February 2021

599

Abstract

Purpose

Indefinite immigration detention causes well-documented harms to mental health, and international condemnation and resistance leave it undisrupted. Health care is non-independent from immigration control, compromising clinical ethics. Attempts to establish protected, independent clinical review and subvert the system via advocacy and political engagement have had limited success.

The purpose of this study is to examine the following: how indefinite detention for deterrence (exemplified by Australia) injures asylum-seekers; how international legal authorities confirm Australia’s cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment; how detention compromises health-care ethics and hurts health professionals; to weigh arguments for and against boycotting immigration detention; and to discover how health professionals might address these harms, achieving significant change.

Design/methodology/approach

Secondary data analyses and ethical argumentation were employed.

Findings

Australian Governments fully understand and accept policy-based injuries. They purposefully dispense cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and intend suffering that causes measurable harms for arriving asylum-seekers exercising their right under Australian law. Health professionals are ethically conflicted, not wanting to abandon patients yet constrained. Indefinite detention prevents them from alleviating sufferings and invites collusion, potentially strengthening harms; thwarts scientific inquiry and evidence-based interventions; and endangers their health whether they resist, leave or remain. Governments have primary responsibility for detained asylum-seekers’ health care. Health professional organisations should negotiate the minimum requirements for their members’ participation to ensure independence, and prevent conflicts of interest and inadvertent collaboration with and enabling systemic harms.

Originality/value

Australia’s aggressive approach may become normalised, without its illegality being determined. Health professional colleges uniting over conditions of participation would foreground ethics and pressure governments internationally over this contagious and inexcusable policy.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Sarah Mares, Christopher Ryan, John Highfield, Carolyn Quadrio, Helen Driscoll, Pat McGorry, Ryan Essex and the Asylum-Seeker Advocacy Group.

Citation

Dudley, M., Young, P., Newman, L., Gale, F. and Stoddart, R. (2021), "Health professionals confront the intentional harms of indefinite immigration detention: an Australian overview, evaluation of alternative responses and proposed strategy", International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care, Vol. 17 No. 1, pp. 35-51. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMHSC-08-2020-0083

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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