美国入境移民和难民的疾病监测-电子疾病通报系统,2014-2019。

IF 37.3 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Mmwr Surveillance Summaries Pub Date : 2022-01-21 DOI:10.15585/mmwr.ss7102a1
Christina R Phares, Yecai Liu, Zanju Wang, Drew L Posey, Deborah Lee, Emily S Jentes, Michelle Weinberg, Tarissa Mitchell, William Stauffer, Julie L Self, Nina Marano
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引用次数: 4

摘要

问题/状况:每年大约有50万移民和成千上万的难民(2001-2020年期间范围:12,000-85,000)移居美国。在国外时,移民、难民和其他申请在美国永久居住的人必须接受体检。该检查可识别A类或B类情况的人员。具有A类条件的申请人不予受理。导致申请人不能入境的传染性疾病包括传染性结核病(A类结核病)、传染性梅毒、淋病和传染性汉森病。患有B类疾病的申请人可以申请,但可能需要治疗或随访。乙类结核病包括在海外成功治疗结核病(B0类)的人、有结核病迹象或症状但其海外实验室检查和临床检查排除目前传染性结核病(B1类)的人、诊断为潜伏性结核病(LTBI)的人(B2类),以及已知结核病患者的密切接触者(B3类)。在海外检查期间也可提供自愿的公共卫生干预措施。到达美国后,建议对B类结核病患者进行后续结核病检查。所涵盖期间:本报告总结了2014-2019年期间抵达美国的难民、移民和符合条件的其他人向疾病预防控制中心电子疾病通报(EDN)系统报告的健康信息。合格的其他人是指虽然不被列为难民的人(例如,某些假释犯、特别移民签证持有人和随后加入的庇护者)有资格获得与难民相同的服务和福利。系统描述:EDN系统具有监控和编程两部分。监测部分是一个集中数据库,收集1)来自a类或B类移民以及所有难民和符合条件的其他人的海外体检的健康相关数据,以及2)来自赛后结核病检查的结核病相关数据。方案组成部分是一个报告系统,向新抵达人员报告打算居住的辖区内的州和地方卫生机构发送抵达通知,并向州和地方卫生机构及其他授权用户提供海外检查的医疗数据。结果:2014-2019年期间,约有350万人从国外移居美国,其中包括320万移民,313,890名难民和95,993名符合条件的人。其中,境外检查发现B类结核病139683人(每10万人检查3903人),原发性或继发性梅毒54人(每10万人检查30人),潜伏性梅毒761人(每10万人检查415人),2016年增加淋病实验室检测后,淋病共131人(每10万人检查374人)。向难民提供了额外的自愿干预措施,包括疫苗接种和寄生虫推定治疗。到2019年,含麻疹疫苗的第一剂和第二剂覆盖率分别为96%和80%。在建议进行假定治疗的难民人群中,根据具体方案,高达96%的难民得到了治疗并接受了治疗。对于在海外被确认患有B类结核病的139,683人,EDN向适当的州或地方卫生机构发送了抵达通知和海外医疗数据,以便于回国后进行结核病检查。在海外确诊为B0类结核病(6586例)或B1类结核病(94533例)的101119人中,共有67432人(67%)向EDN报告了完整的术后检查。在35,814名2-14岁的海外确诊为B2级结核病的儿童中,20,758(58%)向EDN报告了完整的比赛后检查。(在海外体检期间,成人不接受常规的结核分枝杆菌免疫反应测试。)在向EDN报告进行了完整的术后检查的儿童中,B0或B1类结核病患者在抵达后一年内诊断为结核培养阳性的人数为464人(每10万人检查688例),B2类结核病儿童为11人(每10万人检查53例)。解读:2014-2019年,境外体检系统共防控传染性结核病6586例、梅毒815例、淋病131例。当该检查用于提供公共卫生干预措施时,大多数难民(高达96%)接受干预措施。对88190人完成了比赛后随访检查,确定了475例结核培养阳性病例,这是进一步限制结核病在美国传播的重要机会,方法是确定并在必要时为LTBI患者提供预防性护理或为疾病患者提供治疗。 公共卫生行动:联邦,州和地方卫生部门和机构应继续使用EDN数据来监测,评估和改进针对美国或最近抵达的移民,难民和符合条件的其他人的健康相关计划和政策。应考虑在海外体检期间可提供的其他公共卫生干预措施(例如LTBI治疗)。最后,对于B类结核病患者,应采取措施确定并消除完成比赛后检查的障碍,以降低结核病和社区传播的风险,同时采取措施鼓励报告完成的检查,以便更好地进行数据驱动的决策。
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Disease Surveillance Among U.S.-Bound Immigrants and Refugees - Electronic Disease Notification System, United States, 2014-2019.

Problem/condition: Each year, approximately 500,000 immigrants and tens of thousands of refugees (range: 12,000-85,000 during 2001-2020) move to the United States. While still abroad, immigrants, refugees, and others who apply for admission to live permanently in the United States must undergo a medical examination. This examination identifies persons with class A or B conditions. Applicants with class A conditions are inadmissible. Infectious conditions that cause an applicant to be inadmissible include infectious tuberculosis (TB) disease (class A TB), infectious syphilis, gonorrhea, and infectious Hansen's disease. Applicants with class B conditions are admissible but might require treatment or follow-up. Class B TB includes persons who completed successful treatment overseas for TB disease (class B0), those with signs or symptoms suggestive of TB but whose overseas laboratory tests and clinical examinations ruled out current infectious TB disease (class B1), those with a diagnosis of latent TB infection (LTBI) (class B2), and the close contacts of persons known to have TB disease (class B3). Voluntary public health interventions might also be offered during the overseas examination. After arriving in the United States, a follow-up TB examination is recommended for persons with class B TB.

Period covered: This report summarizes health information that was reported to CDC's Electronic Disease Notification (EDN) system for refugees, immigrants, and eligible others who arrived in the United States during 2014-2019. Eligible others are persons who although not classified as refugees (e.g., certain parolees, special immigrant visa holders, and follow-to-join asylees) are eligible for the same services and benefits as refugees.

Description of system: The EDN system has both surveillance and programmatic components. The surveillance component is a centralized database that collects 1) health-related data from the overseas medical examination for immigrants with class A or B conditions and for all refugees and eligible others and 2) TB-related data from the postarrival TB examination. The programmatic component is a reporting system that sends arrival notifications to state and local health agencies in the jurisdiction where newly arriving persons have reported intending to live and provides state and local health agencies and other authorized users with medical data from overseas examinations.

Results: During 2014-2019, approximately 3.5 million persons moved to the United States from abroad, including 3.2 million immigrants, 313,890 refugees, and 95,993 eligible others. Among these, the overseas examination identified 139,683 persons (3,903 per 100,000 persons examined) with class B TB, 54 with primary or secondary syphilis (30 per 100,000 persons tested), 761 with latent syphilis (415 per 100,000 persons tested), and, after laboratory testing for gonorrhea was added in 2016, a total of 131 with gonorrhea (374 per 100,000 persons tested). Refugees were offered additional, voluntary interventions, including vaccinations and presumptive treatment for parasites. By 2019, first- and second-dose coverage with measles-containing vaccine were 96% and 80%, respectively. In refugee populations for whom presumptive treatment is recommended, up to 96% of refugees, depending on the specific regimen, were offered and accepted treatment. For the 139,683 persons identified overseas with class B TB, EDN sent arrival notifications and overseas medical data to the appropriate state or local health agency to facilitate postarrival TB examinations. Among 101,119 persons identified overseas as having class B0 TB (6,586) or class B1 TB (94,533), a total of 67,432 (67%) had a complete postarrival examination reported to EDN. Among 35,814 children aged 2-14 years identified overseas with class B2 TB, 20,758 (58%) had a complete postarrival examination reported to EDN. (Adults are not routinely tested for immune reactivity to Mycobacterium tuberculosis during the overseas medical examination.) Among those with a complete postarrival examination reported to EDN, the number with a diagnosis of culture-positive TB disease within the first year of arrival was 464 (688 cases per 100,000 persons examined) for those with class B0 or B1 TB and was 11 (53 cases per 100,000 persons examined) for children with class B2 TB.

Interpretation: During 2014-2019, the overseas medical examination system prevented importation of 6,586 cases of infectious TB, 815 cases of syphilis, and 131 cases of gonorrhea. When the examination is used to offer public health interventions, most refugees (up to 96%) accept the intervention. Postarrival follow-up examinations, which were completed for 88,190 persons and identified 475 cases of culture-positive TB, represent an important opportunity to further limit spread of TB disease in the United States by identifying and providing, if needed, preventive care for those with LTBI or treatment for those with disease.

Public health action: Federal, state, and local health departments and agencies should continue to use EDN data to monitor, evaluate, and improve health-related programs and policies aimed at U.S.-bound or recently arrived immigrants, refugees, and eligible others. Additional public health interventions that could be offered during the overseas medical examination should be considered (e.g., treatment for LTBI). Finally, for persons with class B TB, measures should be taken to identify and remove barriers to completing postarrival examinations to reduce risk for TB disease and community transmission, along with measures to encourage reporting of completed examinations for better data-driven decision-making.

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来源期刊
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
60.50
自引率
1.20%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) Series, produced by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is commonly referred to as "the voice of CDC." Serving as the primary outlet for timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and practical public health information and recommendations, the MMWR is a crucial publication. Its readership primarily includes physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists, scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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