0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 8000 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 N um berofarrivals S ou th eastA sia Sub-Saharan A frica E astern E u rope FSU O ther Primary* Refugee Arrivals Primary* Refugee Arrivals to MN by Region of MN by Region of World World 1979-2004 1979-2004 Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health *First resettled in Minnesota
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Primary* Refugee Arrivals to MN by Region of World 1979-2004
Primary* Refugee Arrivals to MN by Region of World 1979-2004. *First resettled in Minnesota. Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health. Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health. Primary Refugee Arrival, Minnesota, 2001-2004. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Southeast Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Eastern Europe FSU Other
Primary* Refugee Arrivals Primary* Refugee Arrivals to MN by Region of World MN by Region of World 1979-20041979-2004
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of HealthRefugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health *First resettled in Minnesota
Primary Refugee Arrival, Minnesota, 2001-2004
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Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Month
Nu
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2001 2002 2003 2004
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
P rim a ry R e fu g e e A rr iv a ls , M in n e s o ta , 2 0 0 4
O the r
3%
B urm a
3%
FS U
4%
L ibe ria
6%
E th io p ia
9%
S om a lia
3 2%Hm ong
43%
H m o n gS o m a liaE th io p iaL ib er iaF S UB u rm aO th er
N =7345
“O th e r” in c lu d e s C a m e ro o n , C h in a (a ls o T ib e t), C o n g o , C u b a , E ritre a , G u a te m a la , G u in e a , Ira n , Ira q , K e n ya , N ig e ria , R w a n d a , S ie rra L e o n e , S u d a n , T o g o , V ie tn a m a n d Y e m e n
R e fu g e e H e a lth P ro g ra m , M in n e s o ta D e p a r tm e n t o f H e a lth
Lake
Cook
0
Le Sueur
RiceGoodhue
NoblesRock Jackson Martin Faribault Freeborn Mower Fillmore Houston
Number of Refugees Arrival By Initial County Of Resettlement
2-251- 25
26 - 50
51 - 100
101 - 500
501 - 2000
2001 - 3000
2004 Primary Refugee Arrival To 2004 Primary Refugee Arrival To Minnesota (N=7345) Minnesota (N=7345)
3001 - 4000
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
Primary Refugee Arrivals Screened in Minnesota 1995-2004
24562148
1620
21481927
13161454
1365
1013
18631721
1448
39253674
2704
40133691
3154
27952536
2294
1033964
890
24012240
2115
7345
70056771
0
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7000
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1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Arrivals Eligible for Screening Screened
*Ineligible if moved out of state/unknown destination, unable to locate or died before screening
Primary Refugees Lost to Follow-up Minnesota, 2004
7%
3%
3% 3% 12%
36%
27%
9%
Unable To Locate Moved Out Of State
Refused Screening Screened elsewhere, no results
Missed Appt Moved to Unknown Destination
Contact Failed Data not returned
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
N=574
Primary Refugee Screenings by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2004
World Region Total arrivals Ineligible for Screening
Number
Screened (%*)
Sub-Saharan Africa
3583 304 3124 (95)
E.Asia/SE Asia 3457 24 3365 (98)
Eastern Europe 293 5 277 (96)
Latin America/
Caribbean4 4 -
North Africa/
Middle East8 3 5 (100)
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health *Percent screened among the eligible
Refugee Screening Rates by Exam Type Minnesota, 2004
6%
64%
82%
93%
96%
98%
97%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Malaria
STIs
Lead (<6 yrs old)
Intestinal Parasites
Hepatitis B
TB Infection
Health Screening Rate
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
Health Status of New Refugees, Minnesota, 2004
Health status upon arrival No (%) of refugees No(%) with infection
screened among screened
TB (latent or active)* 6656 (98%) 2252 (34%)
Hep B infection** 6518 (96%) 607 (9%)
Parasitic Infection*** 6283 (93%) 1084 (17%)
Sexually Transmitted 4352 (64%) 82 (2%)
Infections(STIs)****
Malaria Infection 388 (6%) 4 (1%)
Lead 807 (82%) 17 (2%)
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
Total screened: N=6771 (97% of the 7005 eligible refugees) * Persons with >= 10mm induration from Tuberculin Skin Test** Positive for Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAG)
*** Positive for at least one intestinal parasite infection
**** Positive for at least one STI
14%
36%
55%
34%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
96/265
471/3316
N=6656 screened
*Tuberculin Skin Test (TST) >=10mm induration
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
Tuberculosis (Latent or Active) Infection* Rate Among Refugees By Region Of Origin,
Minnesota, 2004
1684/3071
2252/6656
Hepatitis B infection Rate Among Refugees by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2004
2%
8%
11%
9%
0% 3% 6% 9% 12% 15%
Eastern Europe
Sub-Saharan Africa
SE/East Asia
Overall Hep B InfectionRate
Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health
N=6518 screened
607/6518
348/3212
253/3044
6/257
Intestinal Parasitic Infection* Rates Among Refugees by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2004
6%
12%
24%
17%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30%
Eastern Europe
Sub-Saharan Africa
SE/East Asia
Overall ParasiticInfection Rate
* At least one stool parasite found (including nonpathogenic)Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health