A Scoping Review of Refugee Children’s Health Conditions, Outcomes, and Measures Used in Refugee-Serving Public Health Centres/Clinics in Canada
Augustine Botwe, Nour Armoush, Cheryl Poth, Sophie Yohani, Rebecca Gokiert

TL;DR
This study reviews how health conditions and outcomes of refugee children under 5 are measured in Canadian clinics, highlighting gaps in standardized and culturally safe approaches.
Contribution
The paper identifies the lack of standardized and culturally safe measurement tools for refugee children's health in Canadian clinics and emphasizes the need for equitable assessment strategies.
Findings
Most studies focus on physical health conditions like infections and malnutrition, with limited attention to developmental and mental health.
There is significant variability in health measures across provinces and a lack of longitudinal data.
Current approaches show limited cultural adaptation and insufficient standardized tools for refugee children's health assessment.
Abstract
Public health relevance—How does this work relate to a public health issue? Refugee children experience a disproportionate burden of infectious diseases, nutritional deficiencies, and developmental and mental health conditions. Current literature pays limited attention to social determinants of health, despite strong evidence that these factors significantly influence refugee child health outcomes.The lack of standardized, culturally safe measurement approaches for vulnerable populations, especially refugee children, makes their health needs invisible within the healthcare system, contributing to health inequities. Improving early and equitable assessment is essential to reducing preventable morbidity and enhancing long-term health outcomes. Refugee children experience a disproportionate burden of infectious diseases, nutritional deficiencies, and developmental and mental health…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigration, Health and Trauma · Education and experiences of immigrants and refugees · Interpreting and Communication in Healthcare
