The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients

Aim:Worldwide, 22.5 million refugees, half of them children, is a major humanity problem. Refugee children are among the most vulnerable in the world. Recently, we observed an increase in pediatric trauma cases of Syrian immigrant in our hospital. To determine the clinical characteristics of Syrian...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Demet Acar, Mustafa Gülpembe, Emin Fatih Vişneci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galenos Yayinevi 2019-03-01
Series:Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: http://akademikaciltip.com/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/the-vulnerability-of-syrian-mmigrant-pediatric-tra/24291
_version_ 1797912279825514496
author Demet Acar
Mustafa Gülpembe
Emin Fatih Vişneci
author_facet Demet Acar
Mustafa Gülpembe
Emin Fatih Vişneci
author_sort Demet Acar
collection DOAJ
description Aim:Worldwide, 22.5 million refugees, half of them children, is a major humanity problem. Refugee children are among the most vulnerable in the world. Recently, we observed an increase in pediatric trauma cases of Syrian immigrant in our hospital. To determine the clinical characteristics of Syrian immigrant children admitted to the emergency department (ED) with trauma with respect to their frequency, socio-demographic characteristics such as living conditions, education of family, not to go to kinder-garden and corresponding high-risk injury.Materials and Methods:This is a retrospective observational study. All records for children aged between 0-17 years were retrospectively evaluated and only patients admitted to the ED with trauma were included in the study. The data of interest investigated from patient records were age, sex, location, and timing of injury occurrence, as well as the family and education data of parents. The mechanisms of injuries were recorded as blunt or penetrating.Results:Totally 200 children with a mean age of 8.29±4.85 years (range: 1-17 years) were included in the study. Falloffs were the most common cause in all age groups. Head injuries were more common compared with the extremities (82 head traumas compared with 60 upper and 32 lower extremity traumas). On the other hand, upper extremity fractures or dislocations were more common compared with the lower extremities (21 vs 3 cases). Interestingly, in this study, among 200 children included, 51 (25.5%) were Syrian immigrants. The mean age of Syrian immigrants was younger than that of Turkish children (p=0.002).Conclusion:In that study, we have determined approximately one-quarter of the children with trauma are Syrian immigrants. Children between the ages of 1-3 years and 6-9 years, and boys were at a higher risk. Syrian immigrants cannot deal with their children enough because of living difficulties for them in Turkey. The living and educational conditions of the Syrian immigrant children who escaped from the war and took refuge should be made better and the sensitivity of the families should be increased. Kinder-garden education highly protects children from house accident so it is necessary especially for Syrian immigrant children.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T11:53:59Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b4480699d0df41e98d09553d5597931d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2149-5807
2149-6048
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T11:53:59Z
publishDate 2019-03-01
publisher Galenos Yayinevi
record_format Article
series Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine
spelling doaj.art-b4480699d0df41e98d09553d5597931d2023-02-15T16:16:52ZengGalenos YayineviEurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine2149-58072149-60482019-03-01181434710.4274/eajem.galenos.2018.9870013049054The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma PatientsDemet Acar0Mustafa Gülpembe1Emin Fatih Vişneci2 Clinic of Emergency, Konya Training and Research Hospital, Konya, Turkey Clinic of Emergency, Konya Training and Research Hospital, Konya, Turkey Clinic of Emergency, Konya Training and Research Hospital, Konya, Turkey Aim:Worldwide, 22.5 million refugees, half of them children, is a major humanity problem. Refugee children are among the most vulnerable in the world. Recently, we observed an increase in pediatric trauma cases of Syrian immigrant in our hospital. To determine the clinical characteristics of Syrian immigrant children admitted to the emergency department (ED) with trauma with respect to their frequency, socio-demographic characteristics such as living conditions, education of family, not to go to kinder-garden and corresponding high-risk injury.Materials and Methods:This is a retrospective observational study. All records for children aged between 0-17 years were retrospectively evaluated and only patients admitted to the ED with trauma were included in the study. The data of interest investigated from patient records were age, sex, location, and timing of injury occurrence, as well as the family and education data of parents. The mechanisms of injuries were recorded as blunt or penetrating.Results:Totally 200 children with a mean age of 8.29±4.85 years (range: 1-17 years) were included in the study. Falloffs were the most common cause in all age groups. Head injuries were more common compared with the extremities (82 head traumas compared with 60 upper and 32 lower extremity traumas). On the other hand, upper extremity fractures or dislocations were more common compared with the lower extremities (21 vs 3 cases). Interestingly, in this study, among 200 children included, 51 (25.5%) were Syrian immigrants. The mean age of Syrian immigrants was younger than that of Turkish children (p=0.002).Conclusion:In that study, we have determined approximately one-quarter of the children with trauma are Syrian immigrants. Children between the ages of 1-3 years and 6-9 years, and boys were at a higher risk. Syrian immigrants cannot deal with their children enough because of living difficulties for them in Turkey. The living and educational conditions of the Syrian immigrant children who escaped from the war and took refuge should be made better and the sensitivity of the families should be increased. Kinder-garden education highly protects children from house accident so it is necessary especially for Syrian immigrant children. http://akademikaciltip.com/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/the-vulnerability-of-syrian-mmigrant-pediatric-tra/24291 Syrian immigrantpediatric traumaemergency departmentfalls
spellingShingle Demet Acar
Mustafa Gülpembe
Emin Fatih Vişneci
The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients
Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine
Syrian immigrant
pediatric trauma
emergency department
falls
title The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients
title_full The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients
title_fullStr The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients
title_full_unstemmed The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients
title_short The Vulnerability of Syrian Immigrant Pediatric Trauma Patients
title_sort vulnerability of syrian immigrant pediatric trauma patients
topic Syrian immigrant
pediatric trauma
emergency department
falls
url http://akademikaciltip.com/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/the-vulnerability-of-syrian-mmigrant-pediatric-tra/24291
work_keys_str_mv AT demetacar thevulnerabilityofsyrianimmigrantpediatrictraumapatients
AT mustafagulpembe thevulnerabilityofsyrianimmigrantpediatrictraumapatients
AT eminfatihvisneci thevulnerabilityofsyrianimmigrantpediatrictraumapatients
AT demetacar vulnerabilityofsyrianimmigrantpediatrictraumapatients
AT mustafagulpembe vulnerabilityofsyrianimmigrantpediatrictraumapatients
AT eminfatihvisneci vulnerabilityofsyrianimmigrantpediatrictraumapatients