Health and socio-demographic background of Ukrainian minors and their families in Germany – challenges for refugee medicine : A cross-sectional study from the German Network University Medicine (NUM).

Health and socio-demographic background of Ukrainian minors and their families in Germany – challenges for refugee medicine : A cross-sectional study from the German Network University Medicine (NUM).

Publication date: Dec 05, 2024

In 2022, over 1,000,000 people from Ukraine fled to Germany, mostly women and children. The aim of this study was to determine health status and socio-demographic background of Ukrainian refugee minors in Germany and to compare that to German minors. In this study, Ukrainian refugees of all ages, who voluntarily made contact with the study centres via flyers or refugee shelters, were interviewed with the help of trained interpreters from 09-12/2022. We assessed data from minors and their families on socio-economic status, general health perception, current and pre-existing infectious and non-contagious diseases, and vaccination status. The data for the minors were collected by interviewing the accompanying adults. In addition, a physical examination and serological screening for infectious and vaccine-preventable diseases were performed. Overall, 392 minors and accompanying adults (358) were included. Minors’ general and mental health were reported as “at least good” in 83% (316) and 80% (304), respectively. In 16% (63), infectious or other underlying diseases were recorded. Tuberculosis infections (7, 1. 8%) and hepatitis C (2, 0. 5%) were found through the serological tests. HIV could only be detected in one previously known case. Self-reported vaccinations against measles and varicella, for example, did not match serological findings (protection against measles 304; 84%; varicella 230; 64%). Accompanying adults often rate the general health and well-being of Ukrainian refugee minors as rather poor. Frequently, self-reported vaccinations and preexisting diseases did not match serology results; therefore, Ukrainian refugee minors without formal vaccination certificate should be offered all recommended vaccinations and be generously screened for hepatitis B, C and HIV in addition to tuberculosis. • Infectious diseases (TB, hepatitis B/C, HIV) are more common among Ukrainian minors and vaccine hesitancy is more widespread than in many host countries and require appropriate medical care. • Displacement and war worsen medical care and have negative impact on mental health. . • Although intrafamilial spread of infectious diseases was rare (in this cohort), perceived general health of Ukrainian minors is rather poor. • Semi-structured interviews-even with interpreters-are often insufficient to collect valid medical information.

Concepts Keywords
Germany Adolescent
Tuberculosis Adult
Vaccinations Child
Child, Preschool
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Germany
Health Status
Health status
Humans
Infant
Infectious diseases
Intrafamilial spread
Male
Minor refugees
Minors
Refugees
Socioeconomic Factors
Ukraine
Ukraine
Vaccination
Vaccination status
Young Adult

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH health status
disease MESH vaccine-preventable diseases
disease MESH Tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH infections
disease MESH hepatitis C
pathway KEGG Hepatitis C
disease MESH measles
pathway KEGG Measles
disease MESH varicella
disease MESH hepatitis B
pathway KEGG Hepatitis B
disease MESH Infectious diseases
disease IDO host

Original Article

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *