4.5 Article

Health needs of accompanied refugee and asylum-seeking children in a UK specialist clinic

Journal

ACTA PAEDIATRICA
Volume 110, Issue 8, Pages 2396-2404

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/apa.15861

Keywords

chronic conditions; health; malnutrition; obesity; refugee children

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The study identified significant health needs and healthcare access barriers for accompanied refugee and asylum-seeking children in the North East of England. The authors propose a new service model to address these issues, based on the findings from mixed-methods research.
Aim To identify health needs and healthcare access barriers of accompanied refugee and asylum-seeking (RAS) children in the North East of England, and pilot a new service model to address these. Methods Mixed-methods study (retrospective analysis of routinely collected service data, qualitative data from focus groups) of children who attended a hospital-based specialist clinic. Results Over two years, 80 children were referred to this service. Most frequent diagnoses (total n = 104) were anaemia (n = 17), neurodevelopmental (n = 12), respiratory (n = 12) and mental health (n = 9) conditions. Mild-moderate stunting (23%), overweight and obesity (41%), stunting with obesity (9%) and micronutrient deficiencies (vitamin D (66%), vitamin A (40%) and manifest (14%) or latent (25%) iron deficiency anaemia) were highly prevalent. 62% of children had experienced psychological trauma, and 39% had abnormal results in psychosocial wellbeing screening. 21% of children required secondary or tertiary care, 8% mental health referrals, and 47% were followed up in this specialist clinic. Focus groups with families and the community report unaddressed health needs and substantial barriers of access to health care. Conclusion Refugee and asylum-seeking children have substantial health needs and healthcare access barriers that are not routinely addressed. The authors propose a service model for healthcare provision.

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