key: cord-0907606-rpp6t7gj authors: Aborode, Abdullahi Tunde; Tsagkaris, Christos; Oyeyemi, Ajagbe Abayomi; Akanji, Onigbinde Oluwanisola; Essar, Mohammad Yasir; Ahmad, Shoaib; Khawaja, Uzzam Ahmed; Cruz-Martins, Natália; Batiha, Gaber El-Saber title: The genes road: impact of migration on newborn screening and health amid the COVID-19 pandemic in the Eastern Mediterranean region date: 2021-08-09 journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-15848-5 sha: be708cfcdb5cf6fecc6dfb4b1d63ecb76c03d425 doc_id: 907606 cord_uid: rpp6t7gj Nearly two-thirds of migrants residing in camps in Europe are women and children. Many of these children, being born on the way without essential newborns screening, are at some point admitted to pediatric wards in asylum countries. With hospitals overwhelmed with COVID-19 cases, taking appropriate care of newborns becomes a considerable burden. In this frame, prevention, in the form of adequate newborn screening, emerges as a better and more feasible strategy than healing. Migration has grown in numbers and diversity lately. The refugees and migrants' crisis has overwhelmed Europe, particularly in the Southern European Union (EU) member states, with refugees and refugee-like asylum seekers since 2015. Approximately 2.4 million refugees and refugee-like people and 860,000 asylum seekers were located in 27 EU countries by the end of 2018. However, more than 160,000 migrants have been illegally reverted to their original countries every year (Hathaway 2010) . During the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, about 900 irregular arrivals to the EU countries have been detected monthly despite the closure of entry points (Chamie 2020) . Alarmingly, nearly two-thirds of the asylum seekers are women and children (The UN Refugee Agency 2016), and many of these children are born without essential newborns' screening and are at some point admitted to pediatric wards in asylum countries (Kroening et al. 2019 ). In addition, and with hospitals overwhelmed with COVID-19 cases, taking appropriate care of them becomes a huge burden. Thus, prevention is not only better but also more feasible than healing. Few drops of blood are enough for bloodspot screening, and a test is carried out once the newborn leaves the hospital and 2 weeks after birth. For example, 31 congenital conditions, On the other hand, the burden of mental and motor retardation complications is unbearable for anyone, let alone migrants with minimal or no health insurance and resources. Under normal circumstances, even tertiary pediatrics departments could provide no more than supportive care (Kotsiou et a., 2018) . The experience from the second spike of the pandemic in Europe indicates that such departments reaching full capacity may not take in migrants' newborns with phenylketonuria or cretinism (Kotsiou et a., 2018) . Similarly, newborns admitted to cystic fibrosis or intestinal exacerbations are at significant risk of being infected with SARS-CoV-2. Recent studies have reported worse perinatal outcomes and higher mortality among infants in migrant populations settling in developed countries (Gissler et al. 2009 ). Both before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, newborn migrants are in a perilous position. Lack of resources, limited access to healthcare facilities, financial instability, language, and cultural barriers are part of their everyday life. Newborns with congenital conditions moving from country to country or settling in remote camps rarely have a proper medical record or a physician who knows their history. It is reported that more than 529,000 women die every year due to complications from giving birth and neonatal diseases. However, the Eastern Mediterranean region contributes to onetenth of global maternal deaths with an approximation of 53,000 deaths rates every year (WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean 2006). Moreover, Afghanistan and Pakistan shared 60% of the burden of maternal mortality in the Eastern Mediterranean region, and 95% of the prevalence of neonatal diseases and maternal rates are shared between Afghanistan, Iraq, Morocco, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen (WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean 2006) (Table 1) . On top of these, they are more prone to accidents, injuries, and infections because of the circumstances they live (Kotsiou et al. 2018) . Indeed, with the pandemic exposing these adversities, it is high time to consider solutions and to implement an action plan for newborns screening. In this way, identification and communication are of the utmost importance. This means, for example, that if an infant is diagnosed with phenylketonuria in Turkey, its records need to be accessible in English to physicians in Greece or Italy, so that an appropriate diet is not discontinued. It is essential for children with rare congenital disorders, such as Krabbe disease, that the physician who diagnosed them in Libya can communicate with the physician treating them in Spain. In reality, an international patients' identification number could make this plan possible. Thus, proper collaboration and coordination between countries facing migration flows are required. However, the benefit of avoiding exacerbations and hospitalization can be comparable to the expenses in the long term. In addition to this, newborns' screening should be adapted to the migrating populations' inherent traits. This means that all newborns should be tracked and screened as per protocols, given that many babies are born in camps or on the way are not in proper facilities (Liem et al. 2020 ). Moreover, a growing body of evidence suggests that particular diseases are more prevalent among specific nationalities. For example, a recent analysis has detected 166 inherited conditions in newborns of Syrian origins (Copenhagen: WHO Regional Office for Europe 2018; Hamad et al. 2020) . Therefore, it would be wise to include the most prevalent and debilitating diseases in the newborns' screening protocols. Finally, yet significantly, patients' education always matters. In newborn screening, migrating parents need to be educated to seek medical attention for their newborns (Baumeister et al. 2019) . The data on migration of the migrants in the Eastern Mediterranean region, according to the International Organization for Migration, reported that around 3123 migrants and refugees go to Europe via different paths and seas (May 2020) which account for 88% more than the one noted in the past months and two times than last year (International Organization for Migration 2020). The social determinants of health of the migrants in the Eastern Mediterranean region include poverty, illiteracy, malnutrition, and low social status of women are all underlying causes of maternal and neonatal mortality. Neonate delivery is a significant determinant of neonatal and future child health. Results from low birth weight, congenital anomalies, other hereditary diseases (blood diseases, etc.), and other social factors, like poverty, illiteracy, and many more, might be an indirect cause of death or a s o u r c e o f w e a k h e a l t h a n d d i s a b i l i t y i n t h e future (Wikkeling-Scott et al. 2019) . The high prevalence of low birth weight (19.5%) in the region is a matter of concern. Low-birth-weight infants are at 40 times greater risk of neonatal death than normal-weight babies and are 5 times greater risk of postneonatal deaths. However, low-birth-weight babies constitute 19.5% of children born; they account for 60-80% of neonatal deaths either directly or indirectly (WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean 2006; Lawn et al. 2005; Darmstadt 2005 ). In fact, considering the vast number of women who may give birth while relocating and the language barrier, translators and social workers can be advised to convey relevant information (Kotsiou et al. 2018) (Fig. 1) . Despite the need for enhancing health literacy among migrants has already been recognized, multiple interventions to tackle it have been studied (Baumeister et al. 2019 ) but other ways should also be better exploited. Anyway, in a time when healthcare facilities struggle with the pandemic and the migration crisis, early diagnosis and management are pivotal. Thus, the road of genes can follow wild patterns of exacerbation from Africa or Asia to Europe to the Eastern Mediterranean region. However, international and interdisciplinary collaboration is necessary to reach a permanent solution to this problem. Funding This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. 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