Bloch-Infanger Constantine, Bättig Veronika, Kremo Jürg, Widmer Andreas F, Egli Adrian, Bingisser Roland, Battegay Manuel, Erb Stefan
Division of Infectious Diseases & Hospital Epidemiology, University Hospital Basel, University Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Departement of Internal Medicine, Kantonsspital Uri, Altdorf, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 15;12(6):e0179537. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179537. eCollection 2017.
The increasing number of refugees seeking asylum in Europe in recent years poses new challenges for the healthcare systems in the destination countries. The goal of the study was to describe the evolution of medical problems of asylum seekers at a tertiary care centre in Switzerland.
At the University Hospital Basel, we compared all asylum seekers during two 1-year time periods in 2004/05 and 2014/15 concerning demographic characteristics and reasons for referrals and hospitalizations.
Hundred ninety five of 2'544 and 516 of 6'243 asylum seekers registered at the national asylum reception and procedure centre Basel were referred to the University Hospital Basel in 2004/05 and 2014/15, and originated mainly from Europe (62.3%, mainly Turkey) and Africa (49.1%, mainly Eritrea), respectively. Median age was similar in both study periods (26.9 and 26.2 years). Infectious diseases in asylum seekers increased from 22.6% to 36.6% (p<0.001) and were the main reasons for hospitalizations (33.3% of 45 and 55.6% of 81 hospitalized patients, p = 0.017) in 2004/05 compared to 2014/15. The leading infectious diseases in hospitalized patients were tuberculosis (n = 4) and bacterial skin infections (n = 2) in 2004/05; Malaria (n = 9), pneumonia (n = 6), Chickenpox (n = 5), other viral infections (n = 5) and bacterial skin infections (n = 5) in 2014/15. Infectious diseases like malaria, cutaneous diphtheria, louseborne-relapsing fever or scabies were only found in the second study period. Almost one third of the admitted asylum seekers required isolation precautions with median duration of 6-9.5 days in both study periods.
The changing demography of asylum seekers arriving in Switzerland in the current refugee crisis has led to a shift in disease patterns with an increase of infectious diseases and the re-emergence of migration-associated neglected infections. Physicians should be aware of these new challenges.
近年来,在欧洲寻求庇护的难民数量不断增加,给目的地国家的医疗系统带来了新的挑战。本研究的目的是描述瑞士一家三级护理中心寻求庇护者医疗问题的演变情况。
在巴塞尔大学医院,我们比较了2004/05年和2014/15年两个1年期内所有寻求庇护者的人口统计学特征以及转诊和住院原因。
2004/05年和2014/15年,在巴塞尔国家庇护接待和程序中心登记的2544名和6243名寻求庇护者中,分别有195名和516名被转诊至巴塞尔大学医院,他们主要分别来自欧洲(62.3%,主要是土耳其)和非洲(49.1%,主要是厄立特里亚)。两个研究期间的年龄中位数相似(分别为26.9岁和26.2岁)。与2014/15年相比,寻求庇护者中的传染病比例从22.6%增至36.6%(p<0.001),且是住院的主要原因(2004/05年45名住院患者中的33.3%,2014/15年81名住院患者中的55.6%,p = 0.017)。2004/05年住院患者中的主要传染病为肺结核(n = 4)和细菌性皮肤感染(n = 2);2014/15年为疟疾(n = 9)、肺炎(n = 6)、水痘(n = 5)、其他病毒感染(n = 5)和细菌性皮肤感染(n = 5)。疟疾、皮肤白喉、虱传回归热或疥疮等传染病仅在第二个研究期间发现。在两个研究期间,近三分之一的入院寻求庇护者需要隔离预防措施,隔离时间中位数为6 - 9.5天。
在当前难民危机中,抵达瑞士的寻求庇护者人口结构的变化导致了疾病模式的转变,传染病增加,与移民相关的被忽视感染再度出现。医生应意识到这些新挑战。