Growth of Pediatric Refugees after Resettlement to the Southeastern United States.

2021 
Abstract Objective : To compare weight status and body mass index z-scores (BMIz) of refugee children upon arrival to the Southeastern US and after resettlement with age- and sex-matched controls of non-refugee children. Methods : We identified refugee children resettled between July 2014–June 2018 to Forsyth County, NC. Refugees were assigned age- and sex-matched controls (3 controls:1 refugee) who received care at the same healthcare site, were Medicaid insured, and had height and weight recorded at time of their matched refugee's resettlement plus at least 2 additional visits. BMI and BMIz were calculated. Pearson chi-square test assessed differences in weight status at the time of refugee resettlement and at the last measured time point. Multilevel linear mixed-effects regression models assessed change in BMIz by refugee status, adjusting for sex, race/ethnicity, age, and time since resettlement. Results : This study examined 139 pediatric refugees and 417 non-refugee controls;46% were female. At the time of resettlement, refugees had a higher rate of underweight (3.3% vs. 1.9%), higher rate of healthy weight (68.9% vs. 48.2%) and lower rate of overweight/obesity (27.8% vs. 50%), compared to controls p Conclusion : Resettled pediatric refugees were found to have significantly lower predicted BMIz than their age- and sex-matched non-refugee controls.
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