Mutch Raewyn C, Cherian Sarah, Nemba Kuria, Geddes Janet S, Rutherford David M, Chaney Gervase M, Burgner David P
Princess Margaret Hospital for Children, Child and Adolescent Health Service, Australia.
J Paediatr Child Health. 2012 Jul;48(7):582-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1754.2012.02429.x. Epub 2012 Mar 20.
Children account for approximately half of the humanitarian refugees currently resettled in Australia. A multidisciplinary refugee health clinic (RHC) was established at the tertiary paediatric hospital in Western Australia to address burgeoning referrals of refugee children following voluntary post-resettlement health assessment. The aim of this study is to describe the epidemiology of common conditions in resettled paediatric refugees attending a tertiary multidisciplinary RHC.
Standardised clinical and demographic data were routinely collected during first visit clinical assessment at the RHC. Descriptive analyses of the first 1026 children are presented.
One thousand twenty-six refugee children from 475 families and over 30 different ethnicities were described. Nine hundred twenty-seven (90.4%) children were referred following post-resettlement health assessment. Median age was 7.8 years. Common reasons for referral were: vitamin D deficiency (400, 39%), iron deficiency (226, 22%), positive Helicobacter pylori serology (206, 21%), poor appetite (175, 17.1%), and schistosomiasis (170, 16.6%). Comorbidities identified by the RHC included tinea capitis and corporis (297, 28.9%), and dental disease (228, 22.2%). Two-thirds of children (680, 66.3%) had at least one abnormal finding on clinical examination that identified pathologies that were not evident from the history. Three hundred eighty children (37%) were referred to sub-specialty services.
A multidisciplinary paediatric RHC facilitated and strengthened the management of refugee children with multiple and complex health needs. Evidenced-based culturally appropriate methods to identify developmental delay, psychological morbidity and quantify social needs of this vulnerable population remain uncertain. These findings are relevant to the continuing evolution of paediatric refugee health care in Australia and other high income countries.
儿童约占目前在澳大利亚重新安置的人道主义难民的一半。西澳大利亚州的一家三级儿科医院设立了一个多学科难民健康诊所(RHC),以应对重新安置后自愿进行健康评估后激增的难民儿童转诊病例。本研究的目的是描述在一家三级多学科RHC就诊的重新安置的儿科难民中常见疾病的流行病学情况。
在RHC首次就诊临床评估期间常规收集标准化的临床和人口统计学数据。对前1026名儿童进行了描述性分析。
描述了来自475个家庭、30多个不同种族的1026名难民儿童。927名(90.4%)儿童是在重新安置后健康评估后被转诊的。中位年龄为7.8岁。转诊的常见原因有:维生素D缺乏(400例,39%)、缺铁(226例,22%)、幽门螺杆菌血清学阳性(206例,21%)、食欲不佳(175例,17.1%)和血吸虫病(170例,16.6%)。RHC确定的合并症包括头癣和体癣(297例,28.9%)以及牙科疾病(228例,22.2%)。三分之二的儿童(680例,66.3%)在临床检查中至少有一项异常发现,这些发现确定了病史中不明显的病理情况。380名儿童(37%)被转诊至专科服务部门。
一个多学科儿科RHC促进并加强了对有多重和复杂健康需求的难民儿童的管理。确定这一弱势群体发育迟缓、心理疾病并量化其社会需求的基于证据的文化适宜方法仍不确定。这些发现与澳大利亚和其他高收入国家儿科难民医疗保健的持续发展相关。