Publisher DOI: | 10.1093/eurpub/cks067 | Title: | Changing epidemiology of Hepatitis B and migration : a comparison of six Northern and North-Western European countries | Language: | English | Authors: | Chu, Janet JunQing Wörmann, Tanja Popp, Johann Pätzelt, Gunnar Akmatov, Manas K. Krämer, Alexander Reintjes, Ralf |
Issue Date: | Aug-2013 | Publisher: | Oxford Univ. Press | Journal or Series Name: | European journal of public health : official journal of the European Health Association | Volume: | 23 | Issue: | 4 | Startpage: | 642 | Endpage: | 647 | Abstract: | Background: Increased migration volume and different Hepatitis B prevalence between immigration and emigration countries have changed the Hepatitis B virus (HBV) epidemiology considerably in Northern and North-Western European migrants-receiving countries. Due to the difference in migration status monitoring, the HBV infection data on migrants are not easily comparable among those countries. The study aims were: to compare the migration status indicators used by the national surveillance system in six Northern and North-Western European countries (the Netherlands, Germany, Finland, Denmark, Sweden and the UK); to determine the impact of the migration status on HBV infection by comparing the available data on prevalence and transmission routes of Hepatitis B in the migration and the general population in the six countries; to recommend sensible indicators and pertinent measures for HBV infection surveillance and control in the region. Methods: Literature review, statistical data analysis on migration and HBV infection in the six countries; expert interviews to identify migration status indicators used in national surveillance systems. Results: Evident differences were found between the migration and the general population in Hepatitis B prevalence and transmission routes in the six countries. Migration status is monitored differently in six surveillance systems; immigrants from high/intermediate Hepatitis B endemic countries constitute a substantial proportion of HBsAg+ and chronic cases in all six countries. Conclusions: International migration has an obvious impact on Hepatitis B prevalence in the six countries. It is important to include common migration status indicators and to collect comparable data for HBV infection surveillance in different notification systems. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/1608 | ISSN: | 1464-360X | Institute: | Fakultät Life Sciences Department Gesundheitswissenschaften |
Type: | Article |
Appears in Collections: | Publications without full text |
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