Current status of infectious diseases among migrants and non-citizens in Malaysia.

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 PARASITOLOGY Tropical biomedicine Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.47665/tb.40.2.003
N W S Mohd Putera, A S Azman, S N Mohd Zain, H Yahaya, J W Lewis, N Sahimin
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Abstract

The mass movement of migrants to Malaysia for employment is one of the factors contributing to the emergence and re-emergence of infectious diseases in this country. Despite mandatory health screening for migrants seeking employment, prevalence records of infectious diseases amongst migrant populations in Malaysia are still within negligible proportions. Therefore, the present review highlights the incidence, mortality and overall status of infectious diseases amongst migrants' populations in Malaysia, which maybe be useful for impeding exacerbation of inequalities among them and improving our national health system thru robust and effective emergency responses in controlling the prevalent diseases found among these populations and maybe, Malaysian citizens too. Peer-reviewed articles from January 2016 to December 2020 were searched through online platform including SCOPUS, PubMed, Science Direct, and Google Scholar. Non-peer-reviewed reports and publications from ministry and government websites including data from related agencies were also scoured from in order to ensure that there are no cases being overlooked, as most published articles did not have migrants as the research subjects. A total of 29 studies had been selected in the final analysis. Migrants in Malaysia were at higher risk for tuberculosis, malaria, lymphatic filariasis, cholera, leprosy and leptospirosis. Lymphatic filariasis was still endemic among this population while thousand cases of TB and cholera had been reported among them due to cramp living conditions and poor sanitation in their settlements respectively. While malaria had gradually decreased and become sporadic, the influx of migrant workers had led to the rising of imported malaria cases. Low cases of leprosy had been recorded in Malaysia but a significant proportion of it was contributed by migrant workers. As for leptospirosis, studies found that there are prominent cases among migrant workers, which particularly highest within workers with lower educational attainment. Infectious diseases are still prevalent among migrants in Malaysia due to various interplay factors including their working sectors, country of origin, immunization status, type of settlement, impoverished living conditions, and language and cultural barriers that impeding access to health facilities.

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马来西亚移民和非公民传染病的现状。
大批移民前往马来西亚就业是造成该国传染病出现和再次出现的因素之一。尽管对寻求就业的移民进行强制性健康检查,但马来西亚移民人口中传染病的流行率记录仍然微不足道。因此,本综述强调了马来西亚移民人口中传染病的发病率、死亡率和总体状况,这可能有助于阻止他们之间不平等的加剧,并通过强有力和有效的应急反应来改善我们的国家卫生系统,以控制这些人口(也许还有马来西亚公民)中发现的流行疾病。通过SCOPUS、PubMed、Science Direct和Google Scholar等在线平台检索2016年1月至2020年12月的同行评议文章。来自部委和政府网站的非同行评议报告和出版物,包括来自相关机构的数据,也被搜查,以确保没有被忽视的案例,因为大多数发表的文章都没有将移民作为研究对象。在最后的分析中,总共选择了29项研究。马来西亚的移民患肺结核、疟疾、淋巴丝虫病、霍乱、麻风病和钩端螺旋体病的风险较高。淋巴丝虫病仍在这一人群中流行,而由于居住条件狭窄和卫生条件差,他们中分别报告了数千例结核病和霍乱病例。虽然疟疾已逐渐减少,变成零星的,但移徙工人的涌入导致输入性疟疾病例上升。马来西亚记录的麻风病病例很少,但其中很大一部分是由移民工人造成的。至于钩端螺旋体病,研究发现,在农民工中有突出的病例,特别是在受教育程度较低的工人中发病率最高。由于各种相互作用的因素,包括他们的工作部门、原籍国、免疫状况、定居类型、贫困的生活条件以及阻碍获得保健设施的语言和文化障碍,传染病在马来西亚的移民中仍然普遍存在。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Tropical biomedicine
Tropical biomedicine 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
63
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Society publishes the Journal – Tropical Biomedicine, 4 issues yearly. It was first started in 1984. The journal is now abstracted / indexed by Medline, ISI Thompson, CAB International, Zoological Abstracts, SCOPUS. It is available free on the MSPTM website. Members may submit articles on Parasitology, Tropical Medicine and other related subjects for publication in the journal subject to scrutiny by referees. There is a charge of US$200 per manuscript. However, charges will be waived if the first author or corresponding author are members of MSPTM of at least three (3) years'' standing.
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