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Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey

BACKGROUND: The UK has witnessed a considerable increase in immigration in the past decade. Migrant may face barriers to accessing appropriate health care on arrival and the current focus on screening certain migrants for tuberculosis on arrival is considered inadequate. We assessed the implications...

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Autores principales: Cooke, Graham, Hargreaves, Sally, Natkunarajah, Jana, Sandhu, Gurjinder, Dhasmana, Devesh, Eliahoo, Joseph, Holmes, Alison, Friedland, Jon S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1940251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17659074
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-7-113
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author Cooke, Graham
Hargreaves, Sally
Natkunarajah, Jana
Sandhu, Gurjinder
Dhasmana, Devesh
Eliahoo, Joseph
Holmes, Alison
Friedland, Jon S
author_facet Cooke, Graham
Hargreaves, Sally
Natkunarajah, Jana
Sandhu, Gurjinder
Dhasmana, Devesh
Eliahoo, Joseph
Holmes, Alison
Friedland, Jon S
author_sort Cooke, Graham
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The UK has witnessed a considerable increase in immigration in the past decade. Migrant may face barriers to accessing appropriate health care on arrival and the current focus on screening certain migrants for tuberculosis on arrival is considered inadequate. We assessed the implications for an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department in a high migrant area. METHODS: We administered an anonymous 20-point questionnaire survey to all admitted patients during a 6 week period. Questions related to sociodemographic characteristics and clinical presentation. Analysis was by migration status (UK born vs overseas born). RESULTS: 111 of 133 patients completed the survey (response rate 83.4%). 58 (52.2%) were born in the UK; 53 (47.7%) of the cohort were overseas born. Overseas-born were over-represented in comparison to Census data for this survey site (47.7% vs 33.6%; proportional difference 0.142 [95% CI 0.049–0.235]; p = 0.002): overseas born reported 33 different countries of birth, most (73.6%) of whom arrived in the UK pre-1975 and self-reported their nationality as British. A smaller number (26.4%) were new migrants to the UK (≤10 years), mostly refugees/asylum seekers. Overseas-born patients presented with a broad range and more severe spectrum of infections, differing from the UK-born population, resulting in two deaths in this group only. Presentation with a primary infection was associated with refugee/asylum status (n = 8; OR 6.35 [95% CI 1.28–31.50]; p = 0.023), being a new migrant (12; 10.62 [2.24–50.23]; p = 0.003), and being overseas born (31; 3.69 [1.67–8.18]; p = 0.001). Not having registered with a primary-care physician was associated with being overseas born, being a refugee/asylum seeker, being a new migrant, not having English as a first language, and being in the UK for ≤5 years. No significant differences were found between groups in terms of duration of illness prior to presentation or duration of hospitalisation (mean 11.74 days [SD 12.69]). CONCLUSION: Migrants presented with a range of more severe infections, which suggests they face barriers to accessing appropriate health care and screening both on arrival and once settled through primary care services. A more organised and holistic approach to migrant health care is required.
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spelling pubmed-19402512007-08-08 Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey Cooke, Graham Hargreaves, Sally Natkunarajah, Jana Sandhu, Gurjinder Dhasmana, Devesh Eliahoo, Joseph Holmes, Alison Friedland, Jon S BMC Health Serv Res Research Article BACKGROUND: The UK has witnessed a considerable increase in immigration in the past decade. Migrant may face barriers to accessing appropriate health care on arrival and the current focus on screening certain migrants for tuberculosis on arrival is considered inadequate. We assessed the implications for an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department in a high migrant area. METHODS: We administered an anonymous 20-point questionnaire survey to all admitted patients during a 6 week period. Questions related to sociodemographic characteristics and clinical presentation. Analysis was by migration status (UK born vs overseas born). RESULTS: 111 of 133 patients completed the survey (response rate 83.4%). 58 (52.2%) were born in the UK; 53 (47.7%) of the cohort were overseas born. Overseas-born were over-represented in comparison to Census data for this survey site (47.7% vs 33.6%; proportional difference 0.142 [95% CI 0.049–0.235]; p = 0.002): overseas born reported 33 different countries of birth, most (73.6%) of whom arrived in the UK pre-1975 and self-reported their nationality as British. A smaller number (26.4%) were new migrants to the UK (≤10 years), mostly refugees/asylum seekers. Overseas-born patients presented with a broad range and more severe spectrum of infections, differing from the UK-born population, resulting in two deaths in this group only. Presentation with a primary infection was associated with refugee/asylum status (n = 8; OR 6.35 [95% CI 1.28–31.50]; p = 0.023), being a new migrant (12; 10.62 [2.24–50.23]; p = 0.003), and being overseas born (31; 3.69 [1.67–8.18]; p = 0.001). Not having registered with a primary-care physician was associated with being overseas born, being a refugee/asylum seeker, being a new migrant, not having English as a first language, and being in the UK for ≤5 years. No significant differences were found between groups in terms of duration of illness prior to presentation or duration of hospitalisation (mean 11.74 days [SD 12.69]). CONCLUSION: Migrants presented with a range of more severe infections, which suggests they face barriers to accessing appropriate health care and screening both on arrival and once settled through primary care services. A more organised and holistic approach to migrant health care is required. BioMed Central 2007-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC1940251/ /pubmed/17659074 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-7-113 Text en Copyright © 2007 Cooke et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cooke, Graham
Hargreaves, Sally
Natkunarajah, Jana
Sandhu, Gurjinder
Dhasmana, Devesh
Eliahoo, Joseph
Holmes, Alison
Friedland, Jon S
Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
title Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
title_full Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
title_fullStr Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
title_full_unstemmed Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
title_short Impact on and use of an inner-city London Infectious Diseases Department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
title_sort impact on and use of an inner-city london infectious diseases department by international migrants: a questionnaire survey
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1940251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17659074
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-7-113
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