COVID-19 VACCINATION IN MIGRANTS AND REFUGEES: LESSONS LEARNT AND GOOD PRACTICES

COVID-19 Vaccination in Migrants and Refugees: Lessons Learnt and Good Practices

COVID-19 Vaccination in Migrants and Refugees: Lessons Learnt and Good Practices

Blog Article

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated inequalities between low- and high-income countries.Within the latter, a greater impact is seen in the poorest and most vulnerable people, including refugees, asylum seekers, and migrants.They all may experience poor access to quality healthcare or have suboptimal health-seeking behavior, distrust of governments, or fear of detention and deportation if seeking healthcare.Some refugees and migrants may face multiple barriers to vaccination and access to health systems that are relevant to Leasing as an instrument for innovative development of agricultural enterprises the administration of COVID-19 vaccines, despite the growing inclusion of these populations in public health policies.

Several good practices have emerged to ensure the inclusion of these populations in vaccination and Short-term wind power combination forecasting method based on wind speed correction of numerical weather prediction healthcare for COVID-19 globally.However, inequalities persist between high-income and low-/middle-income populations.The inequalities in COVID-19 vaccination reflect the already existing ones in common health services worldwide.Further efforts are necessary to reduce such disparities, to protect the vulnerable, and, by extension, the general population.

The initiatives organized, both at global and local levels, to support vaccination campaigns represent a notable example of how complex multilevel structures, such as health systems, as well as limited resource health services, can successfully face, even during a health emergency, the challenges related to global health issues.

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