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  • Book
    edited by Aniyizhai Annamalai.
    Summary: Refugee health is growing as an academic medical discipline. More and more health care providers are coming together to exchange research information, educational curricula and social policies related to refugee health. The number of practitioners attending the annual North American Refugee Healthcare Conference has doubled since 2014. Refugees arrive in the United States from different parts of the world. Refugees undergo a medical screening soon after arrival, as recommended by the U.S. Department of State, and it is usually primary care practitioners who usually evaluate these patients at this first visit. Psychiatrists and other specialists may also evaluate them soon after arrival.Though physicians receive a variable amount of training in cross-cultural medicine, virtually none is in the area of refugee evaluations. There are several major ways that the field has changed. U.S. refugee policies and refugee admission numbers have changed dramatically in the past four years as has the epidemiology of medical conditions because the demographics of refugees have changed. The CDC guidelines for domestic screening have also been modified significantly as some of the screening tests are no longer recommended. Protocols have also been updated for presumptive treatment received by refugees before departure to the United States of other countries. A new chapter on end of life care for refugees has been added to the book. Now fully revised and expanded, this second edition reflects the many changes that have occurred in the field of refugee health since 2014. Refugee Health Care remains the definitive resource for primary care physicians and mental health practitioners who see and evaluate refugees. It is also relevant for medical, nursing and public health students involved with refugee health as well as resettlement agency workers and public health officials overseeing refugee care.

    Contents:
    Chapter 01 Introduction to Refugees
    Chapter 2: Culturally Appropriate Care
    Chapter 3 Domestic Health Assessment
    Chapter 4 Immunizations
    Chapter 5 Tuberculosis
    Chapter 6 Parasitic Infections
    Chapter 7 Viral Hepatitis
    Chapter 8 Malaria
    Chapter 9 HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted Infections
    Chapter 10 Chronic Disease Management
    Chapter 11 Chronic Pain
    Chapter 12 Palliative and End-of-Life Care
    Chapter 13 Risk Factors and Prevalence of Mental Illness
    Chapter 14 Mental Health SCREENING
    Chapter 15 Treatment of Mental Illness
    Chapter 16 Torture and Violence
    Chapter 17 Women's Health
    Chapter 18 Pediatric Primary Care
    Chapter 19 Medical Evaluation of Asylum Seekers.
    Digital Access Springer 2020