Maren Hintermeier, Nora Gottlieb, Sven Rohleder, Jan Oppenberg, Mazen Baroudi, Sweetmavourneen Pernitez-Agan, et al.

COVID-19 among migrants, refugees, and internally displaced persons

Systematic review, meta-analysis and qualitative synthesis of the global empirical literature

Schlagwort(e): COVID-19, Forschung, Geflüchtete, Migration

Evidence amounted early that migrants, who are often side-lined in pandemic response or preparedness plans, are disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences. However, synthesised evidence that quantifies the magnitude of inequalities in infection risk, disease outcomes, consequences of pandemic measures or that explains the underlying mechanisms is lacking.

Even in the advanced stages of the pandemic, migrants faced higher infection risks and disproportionately suffered from the consequences of COVID-19 disease, including deaths. Population-level interventions in future health emergencies must better consider socio-economic, structural and community-level exposures to mitigate risks among migrants. Enhancing health information systems is crucial, as the lack of migration variables makes it difficult to close coverage gaps, leaving migrants largely ‘invisible’ in official data.
 

Autorinnen und Autoren:
Maren Hintermeier, Nora Gottlieb, Sven Rohleder, Jan Oppenberg, Mazen Baroudi, Sweetmavourneen Pernitez-Agan, Janice Lopez, Sergio Flores, Amir Mohsenpour, Kolitha Wickramage, and Kayvan Bozorgmehr
Veröffentlicht in eClinicalMedicine 2024, doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102698 

Zur Studie:
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/eclinm/article/PIIS2589-5370(24)00277-3/fulltext  

Kontakt:
Kayvan Borzorgmehr: kayvan.bozorgmehr@uni-bielefeld.de 


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