The migrant population residing in Portugal has been growing. In 2015, the pediatrics department at Professor Doutor Fernando Fonseca Hospital, a level II hospital, implemented a screening for endemic pathologies in asymptomatic migrant children to enable their timely diagnosis and treatment. This study aimed to identify and characterize the main findings in the migrant pathology screening.
This was a retrospective and descriptive study of asymptomatic children and adolescents who underwent opportunistic screening for migrant pathology in a hospital setting between January 2016 and April 2021. Data analysis was performed using Microsoft Excel.
A total of 256 individuals were included in the study; 53.5% (137/256) were female, with a median age of eight years and two months (minimum five months; maximum 17 years and 10 months). The majority of the participants were from Guinea-Bissau (29.7%, 76/256), Angola (19.1%, 49/256) and Cape Verde (12.1%, 31/256) and had been residents in Portugal for a median time of five months (minimum two days; maximum three years and five months). A total of 42.6% (109/256) participants did not have the Portuguese vaccination schedule updated. Screening was carried out in an outpatient setting in 71.9% (184/256) of individuals. A total of 38.7% (99/256) presented screening alterations, including 65 anemia cases (18 caused by iron deficiency and one by sickle cell anemia), 5 cases of tuberculosis infection and 1 case of pulmonary tuberculosis, 1 of human immunodeficiency virus infection, 3 hepatitis B virus infection cases, 20 of parasitic infections and 2 cases of female genital mutilations.
The revised migrant pathology screening protocol enabled the detection of diseases with a significant impact on the health of individual children and adolescents. This protocol serves as a practical tool for accurately monitoring the health status of this population.
Copyright © 2024, Castello-Branco Ribeiro et al.