Upholding the right to health of forcibly displaced children in Europe
Amy Stevens, Zeliha Öcek, Sergey Sargsyan, Michelle Black

TL;DR
Europe must improve health access for 9 million forcibly displaced children facing barriers due to underfunded systems and discriminatory policies.
Contribution
The paper outlines actionable policies to uphold the right to health for displaced children in Europe.
Findings
Displaced children face systemic barriers like racism, language issues, and underfunded health systems.
Populist policies and anti-immigrant sentiment are increasing health-harming practices.
Child-centered policies and cross-country collaboration are essential for equitable healthcare access.
Abstract
In 2023 Europe hosted an estimated 9 million children who had been forcibly displaced from their homes because of conflict, persecution, violence, natural or environmental disasters, climate crisis, human trafficking and extreme poverty. Their experiences pre, during and post migration impact their health, wellbeing and development. Countries across the European Region have a moral and legal duty to uphold the right to health of all children living within their borders, irrespective of immigration status. However, many countries are falling short of delivering on these obligations. The rise in populist radical right politics and anti-immigrant sentiment across the Region has led to an increase in potentially health-harming immigration policies and practices. Challenges to meeting the health needs of displaced children include underfunded health systems, limited specialist services,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigration, Health and Trauma · Health and Conflict Studies · Human Rights and Development
