Migrants Rescued on the Mediterranean Sea Route: Nutritional, Psychological Status and Infectious Disease Control

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Date

2020

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

J Infection Developing Countries

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

30

OpenAIRE Views

114

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Top 10%
Popularity
Top 10%

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Journal Issue

Abstract

Introduction: North Africa has become a key migratory hub where a large number of migrants attempt the journey by sea from the Libyan coastline to the south of Europe. In this humanitarian disaster scenario, the Mediterranean route has been one of the most used by illegal boats. Methodology: In this report, the state of physical and psychological health of a cluster of Eritrean migrants, escaped from Libya and rescued in the Mediterranean Sea after a shipwreck, was described by epidemiological, clinical and laboratory investigations. Results: Data suggest that despite the majority of the migrants being apparently in good health upon a syndromic surveillance approach, most of them suffered a decline in psychological status as well as severe malnutrition. The emergence of infectious diseases, related to poor living conditions during the journey, is not a rare event. Conclusion: The present report highlights the risks of failures of the syndromic medical approach in the setting of the extremely challenging migration route and underlines migrant frailties consequent to a prolonged journey and long period of detention. These stressors, which can degrade the initial health condition of traveling migrants, can lead to a premature exhausted migrant effect that should be carefully investigated in order to avoid the early emergence of diseases related to frailty.

Description

Keywords

Surveillance, laboratory blood screening, migrants, healthy migrant hypothesis, exhausted migrant effect, Vitamin-D Deficiency, B-Virus Infection, Phylogenetic Analysis, Asylum Seekers, Prevalence, Male, healthy migrant hypothesis, Libya, Laboratory Blood Screening, Eritrea, Migrants, Microbiology, Communicable Diseases, exhausted migrant effect, Virology, Mediterranean Sea, Rescue Work, Humans, Mass Screening, Child, Internal medicine, Transients and Migrants, Refugees, Surveillance, Malnutrition, General Medicine, RC31-1245, QR1-502, Europe, Infectious Diseases, Communicable Disease Control, Parasitology, Female

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

Citation

WoS Q

Q4

Scopus Q

Q4
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OpenCitations Citation Count
10

Source

Journal of Infectıon in Developıng Countrıes

Volume

14

Issue

5

Start Page

454

End Page

462
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Citations

Scopus : 14

PubMed : 6

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Mendeley Readers : 88

SCOPUS™ Citations

14

checked on Mar 15, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

14

checked on Mar 15, 2026

Page Views

4

checked on Mar 15, 2026

Downloads

12

checked on Mar 15, 2026

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1.0509

Sustainable Development Goals

1

NO POVERTY
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3

GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
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