1 / 13

Primary* Refugee Arrivals to Minnesota by Region of World, 1979-2017

Primary* Refugee Arrivals to Minnesota by Region of World, 1979-2017. *First resettled in Minnesota. Refugee and International Health Program. Primary Refugee Arrivals by Month, Minnesota, 2013-2017. 2017 Primary Refugee Arrivals to Minnesota (N=1,103). Lake of the Woods. Kittson.

adamdaniel
Download Presentation

Primary* Refugee Arrivals to Minnesota by Region of World, 1979-2017

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Primary* Refugee Arrivals to Minnesota by Region of World,1979-2017 *First resettled in Minnesota Refugee and International Health Program

  2. Primary Refugee Arrivals by Month, Minnesota, 2013-2017

  3. 2017 Primary Refugee Arrivals to Minnesota (N=1,103) Lakeof theWoods Kittson Roseau Koochiching Marshall St. Louis Beltrami Pennington Polk Cook ClearWater Red Lake Lake Itasca Mahnomen Norman Hubbard Cass Becker Clay Aitkin Wadena Crow Wing Carlton Number of Refugee Arrivals By Initial County Of Resettlement Otter Tail Wilkin Pine Todd MilleLacs Kanabec 0 Grant Douglas Morrison 1- 10 Benton Stevens Pope Stearns Traverse Isanti Big Stone 11 - 30 Sherburne Chisago Swift Kandiyohi 31 - 100 Anoka Wash-ing-ton 71 Meeker Wright Ram- sey Hennepin Chippewa Hennepin 101 - 250 Lac Qui Parle McLeod Carver Renville 251 - 500 Scott Yellow Medicine Dakota Sibley Lincoln Lyon >500 Redwood Rice Le Sueur Goodhue Nicollet Wabasha Brown Pipestone Murray Watonwan Blue Earth Waseca Steele Dodge Olmsted Winona Cottonwood Rock Nobles Jackson Martin Faribault Freeborn Mower Fillmore Houston Refugee and International Health Program

  4. Primary Refugee Arrivals, Minnesota, 2017 *“Other” includes Belarus, Bhutan, Cameroon, China, Djibouti, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Eritrea, Guatemala, Honduras, Indonesia, Kenya, Liberia, Mexico, Moldova, Nepal, Philippines, Russia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, and Vietnam. Refugee and International Health Program

  5. Country of Origin by County of Resettlement, Minnesota, 2017 N=455 N=239 N=77 N=84 Refugee and International Health Program

  6. Primary Refugee Arrivals Screened in Minnesota, 2007-2017 98% 99% 99% 98% 97% 99% 99% 99% 98% 99% 99% Ineligible if moved out of state or to an unknown destination, no insurance, unable to locate, or died before screening Refugee and International Health Program

  7. Primary Refugees Reasons for No Screening, Minnesota, 2017 N= 35 *Ineligible for the refugee health assessment

  8. Refugee Screening Rates by Exam Type, Minnesota, 2017 1,068 / 1,089 1,045 / 1,068 1,058 / 1,068 669 / 1,068 473 / 483 1,029 / 1,068 **Screened for at least one type of STI

  9. Health Status of New Refugees, Minnesota, 2017* *Total screened: N=1,068(98% of 1,089 eligible refugees) ** Persons with LTBI (>= 10mm induration or IGRA+, normal CXR) or suspect/active TB disease *** Positive for Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) **** Positive for at least one intestinal parasite infection ***** Positive for at least one STI (tested for syphilis, HIV, chlamydia, and/or gonorrhea) ****** Children <17 years old (N=483 screened); lead level ≥5 µg/dL

  10. Latent or Active Tuberculosis (TB)* Among Refugees By Region Of Origin, Minnesota, 2017 N=1,045 screened 223 / 1,045 167 / 635 47 / 297 7 / 76 2 / 29 *Diagnosis of Latent TB infection (N=220) or Suspect/Active TB disease (N=3)

  11. Intestinal Parasitic Infection* Among Refugees by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2017 N=669 screened 141 / 669 97 / 397 39 / 193 1 / 5 4 / 57 0 / 57 *At least 1 parasitic infection found via stool or serology (excluding nonpathogenic)

  12. Hepatitis B* Infection Among Refugees by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2017 N=1,058 screened 38 / 1,058 24 / 649 14 / 297 0/ 9 0/ 750 0/ 28 *Positive hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)

  13. Immunization Status Among Refugees, Minnesota, 2002-2017

More Related