From the Department of Neurology (F.J.M.), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Department of Neurology (I.H.), University Hospital of Würzburg, Germany; Department of Neurology (G.L.B.), University of Rochester Medical Center, NY; Department of Neurology (A.S.), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Department of Neurology (E.S.), Medical University Innsbruck, Austria; Department of Paediatric Neurology (J.M.W.), University of Cape Town, South Africa; American Academy of Neurology (H.S.), Minneapolis, MN; and Department of Neurology (L.K.J.), Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
Neurology. 2023 May 16;100(20):962-969. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000206857. Epub 2023 Mar 1.
There is a growing number of forcibly displaced persons (FDPs) worldwide. With more than 100 million people forcibly displaced today, there is an urgent mandate to understand the neurologic care needs of this population and how neurologists and other health care workers can most effectively provide that care. In this Emerging Issues in Neurology article, we attempt to (1) define the scope of the problem of providing neurologic care to FDPs, (2) highlight commonly encountered clinical challenges related to neurologic care of FDPs, and (3) provide useful clinical information for neurologists and other clinicians who deliver care to FDPs with neurologic needs. We address the terminology of forcible displacement and how terms may differ across a person's migration journey. Common challenges encountered by FDPs with neurologic needs across settings include loss of support systems, loss of personal health information, language barriers and differing expression of symptoms, differing belief systems, epidemiologic patterns of disease unfamiliar to the clinician, and patients' fear and perceived risks of engaging with health systems. Practical approaches are shared for clinicians who encounter an FDP with a neurologic presentation. Finally, the article discusses many unmet neurologic needs of FDPs, which require significant investment. These include addressing lapses in neurologic care during displacement and understanding the effects of forcible displacement on people with chronic neurologic conditions. Future research and educational resources should focus on improving epidemiologic intelligence for neurologic conditions across geographies, developing curricula for optimizing the neurologic care of FDPs, and evaluating the most appropriate and effective uses of health technologies in humanitarian settings.
全球被迫流离失所者(FDP)的人数不断增加。目前有超过 1 亿人被迫流离失所,因此迫切需要了解这一人群的神经保健需求,以及神经科医生和其他卫生保健工作者如何最有效地提供这种护理。在这篇《神经学中的新问题》文章中,我们试图(1)定义为 FDP 提供神经保健的问题范围,(2)强调与 FDP 的神经保健相关的常见临床挑战,以及(3)为为有神经需求的 FDP 提供护理的神经科医生和其他临床医生提供有用的临床信息。我们将涉及到强制流离失所的术语以及一个人在移民过程中术语可能存在的差异。在不同环境中,有神经需求的 FDP 共同面临的常见挑战包括:支持系统的丧失、个人健康信息的丧失、语言障碍和症状表达的差异、不同的信仰体系、临床医生不熟悉的疾病流行模式,以及患者对参与卫生系统的恐惧和潜在风险。本文为遇到有神经表现的 FDP 的临床医生分享了一些实用方法。最后,文章讨论了 FDP 许多未满足的神经需求,这些需求需要大量投资。这些需求包括解决流离失所期间的神经保健失误,以及了解强制流离失所对患有慢性神经疾病的人的影响。未来的研究和教育资源应侧重于改善跨地域的神经疾病流行病学情报,为优化 FDP 的神经保健制定课程,并评估人道主义环境中卫生技术的最适当和有效的用途。