Global Health and Tropical Medicine (GHTM), Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (IHMT), NOVA University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.
Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences (CICS.NOVA), Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities (NOVA FCSH), NOVA University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.
BMJ Open. 2022 Oct 25;12(10):e061919. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061919.
The CRIAS (Health trajectories of Immigrant Children in Amadora) cohort study was created to explore whether children exposed to a migratory process experience different health risks over time, including physical health, cognitive, socioemotional and behavioural challenges and different healthcare utilisation patterns.
The original CRIAS was set up to include 604 children born in 2015, of whom 50% were immigrants, and their parents. Recruitment of 420 children took place between June 2019 and March 2020 at age 4/5 years, with follow-up carried out at age 5/6 years, at age 6/7 years currently under way.
Baseline data at age 4/5 years (2019-2020) suggested immigrant children to be more likely to belong to families with less income, compared with non-immigrant children. Being a first-generation immigrant child increased the odds of emotional and behavioural difficulties (adjusted OR 2.2; 95% CI: 1.06 to 4.76); more immigrant children required monitoring of items in the psychomotor development test (38.5% vs 28.3%). The prevalence of primary care utilisation was slightly higher among immigrant children (78.0% vs 73.8%), yet they received less health monitoring assessments for age 4 years. Utilisation of the hospital emergency department was higher among immigrants (53.2% vs 40.6%). Age 5 years follow-up (2020-2021) confirmed more immigrant children requiring monitoring of psychomotor development, compared with non-immigrant children (33.9% vs 21.6%). Economic inequalities exacerbated by post-COVID-19 pandemic confinement with parents of immigrant children 3.2 times more likely to have their household income decreased.
Further follow-up will take place at 8, 10, 12/13 and 15 years of age. Funds awarded by the National Science Foundation will allow 900 more children from four other Lisbon area municipalities to be included in the cohort (cohort-sequential design).
CRIAS(阿马多拉移民儿童健康轨迹)队列研究旨在探讨经历移民过程的儿童是否会随着时间的推移经历不同的健康风险,包括身体健康、认知、社会情感和行为挑战以及不同的医疗保健利用模式。
最初的 CRIAS 研究纳入了 2015 年出生的 604 名儿童,其中 50%是移民,以及他们的父母。2019 年 6 月至 2020 年 3 月,在 4/5 岁时招募了 420 名儿童,目前正在进行 5/6 岁和 6/7 岁的随访。
在 4/5 岁时(2019-2020 年)的基线数据表明,与非移民儿童相比,移民儿童更有可能来自收入较低的家庭。作为第一代移民儿童,情绪和行为困难的几率增加(调整后的优势比 2.2;95%可信区间:1.06 至 4.76);更多的移民儿童需要监测精神运动发育测试中的项目(38.5%比 28.3%)。移民儿童的初级保健利用率略高(78.0%比 73.8%),但他们接受的 4 岁健康监测评估较少。移民儿童使用医院急诊部门的比例较高(53.2%比 40.6%)。2020-2021 年的 5 岁随访证实,与非移民儿童相比,更多的移民儿童需要监测精神运动发育(33.9%比 21.6%)。由于新冠疫情限制,移民儿童父母的家庭收入减少了 3.2 倍,这加剧了经济不平等。
将在 8、10、12/13 和 15 岁时进行进一步随访。国家科学基金会授予的资金将允许来自里斯本地区另外四个城市的 900 名儿童加入该队列(队列顺序设计)。