Journal article
No jab, no record: Catch-up vaccination of children in immigration detention
KM Kiang, S Elia, GA Paxton
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health | WILEY | Published : 2018
DOI: 10.1111/jpc.13822
Abstract
International Health and Medical Services (IHMS) are contracted to provide health services, including catch-up vaccination, for individuals in immigration detention. Our audit of catch-up vaccination in asylum seeker children who spent time in held detention demonstrates inadequate and suboptimal vaccine delivery in this setting, and no evidence that IHMS recorded vaccines on the Australian Childhood Immunisation Register at the time. We also found substantial shortfalls in vaccination for these children after they were released from detention. Immunisation in this cohort falls well below Australian community standards, does not demonstrate assurance in IHMS provision of care, and has implic..
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Funding Acknowledgements
GA Paxton has provided advice to Department of Immigration and Border Protection through the Minister's Council for Asylum Seekers and Detention (from 2015), the Independent Health Advisor's Panel (from 2014) and the Health Subcommittee of the Joint Advisory Committee for Regional Processing arrangements (2013-2016), and chairs a working group on immunisation in refugee and asylum seeker populations for the Victorian Department of Health and Human Services (from 2015). Royal Children's Hospital Immigrant Health Service is funded by the Victorian Department of Health and Human Services.