Lack of Immunization Documentation in Minnesota Refugees: Challenges for Refugee Preventive Health Care

Children and adults immigrating to the United States without documentation of vaccinations or evidence of immunity should receive age-appropriate immunizations. To learn how often immunization documentation is lacking, we reviewed medical screening records of 1,389 primary refugees over 18 months of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of immigrant and minority health 2001-01, Vol.3 (1), p.47-52
Hauptverfasser: Lifson, Alan R, Thai, Dzung, Kaying Hang
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container_title Journal of immigrant and minority health
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creator Lifson, Alan R
Thai, Dzung
Kaying Hang
description Children and adults immigrating to the United States without documentation of vaccinations or evidence of immunity should receive age-appropriate immunizations. To learn how often immunization documentation is lacking, we reviewed medical screening records of 1,389 primary refugees over 18 months of age who came Minnesota during 1998. Restricting our analysis to those age groups for whom specific immunizations are recommended, 81.1% of refugees lacked documentation of receiving three doses of diphtheria and tetanus vaccines; 78.8% lacked documentation of one dose of measles vaccine, and 63.8% lacked documentation of three doses of polio vaccine. Of refugees without a known positive test for hepatitis B antigen or antibody, 99.5% lacked documentation of receiving three doses of hepatitis B vaccine. Documentation rates decreased with increasing age, and were lowest for refugees from sub-Saharan Africa (p < 0.001). Refugees and other immigrants may face a number of barriers to receiving necessary immunizations. Health care providers seeing these new arrivals need to ensure that they do fail to receive recommended vaccinations and other preventive health care. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
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To learn how often immunization documentation is lacking, we reviewed medical screening records of 1,389 primary refugees over 18 months of age who came Minnesota during 1998. Restricting our analysis to those age groups for whom specific immunizations are recommended, 81.1% of refugees lacked documentation of receiving three doses of diphtheria and tetanus vaccines; 78.8% lacked documentation of one dose of measles vaccine, and 63.8% lacked documentation of three doses of polio vaccine. Of refugees without a known positive test for hepatitis B antigen or antibody, 99.5% lacked documentation of receiving three doses of hepatitis B vaccine. Documentation rates decreased with increasing age, and were lowest for refugees from sub-Saharan Africa (p &lt; 0.001). Refugees and other immigrants may face a number of barriers to receiving necessary immunizations. Health care providers seeing these new arrivals need to ensure that they do fail to receive recommended vaccinations and other preventive health care. 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Health care providers seeing these new arrivals need to ensure that they do fail to receive recommended vaccinations and other preventive health care. 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subjects Adults
Age
Age groups
Antibodies
Antigens
Blood diseases
Counties
Departments
Diphtheria
Disease prevention
Documentation
Dosage
Evidence
Health care
Health care industry
Health Promotion
Health services
Hepatitis
Hepatitis B
Immigrants
Immigration
Immunity
Immunity (Disease)
Immunization
Land Settlement
Measles
Medical personnel
Medical screening
Medicine
Noncitizens
Periodicals
Poliomyelitis
Preventive medicine
Public health
Records (Forms)
Refugees
Rubella
States
Statistical analysis
Tests
Tetanus
Vaccines
Viruses
Young Children
title Lack of Immunization Documentation in Minnesota Refugees: Challenges for Refugee Preventive Health Care
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