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Health Needs of Ukrainian Refugees Displaced in Moldova: A Report from an Italian Emergency Medical Team

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2025

Emanuela Parotto*
Affiliation:
Azienda Ospedale Università, Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Unit in Complex Surgery and Transplant Surgery, Padua, Italy
Valentina Isidoris
Affiliation:
Doctors with Africa-CUAMM, International Relations Department, Padua, Italy
Anna Cavestro
Affiliation:
Doctors with Africa-CUAMM, International Relations Department, Padua, Italy
Andrea Atzori
Affiliation:
Doctors with Africa-CUAMM, International Relations Department, Padua, Italy
*
Correspondence: Emanuela Parotto Azienda Ospedale Università Padova Padova 35128 Italy E-mail: emanuela.parotto@gmail.com

Abstract

Introduction:

The escalation of the armed Ukrainian conflict forced millions of refugees to cross borders into neighboring countries, such as Poland, Czech Republic, Republic of Moldova, and Romania. The objective of this manuscript is to report the mission of an Italian Emergency Medical Team (EMT), named CUAMM EMT, deployed to assist Ukrainian refugees sheltered in the Republic of Moldova.

Observations:

A total of 1,173 patients were admitted to the CUAMM EMT during the period of observation covered in this report (June - December 2022). The majority of patients (88.7%; n = 1,040) had health problems not directly related to the conflicts, while only 3.2% (n = 38) of patients presented diseases directly related to the event. With reference to the World Health Organization (WHO) Minimum Data Set (MDS), the most prevalent diagnosis (66.8%; n = 783) referred to “other diseases, not specified above” (Code 29). Among this group, the majority of diagnosis were attributable to non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases (23.4%; n = 177), gastrointestinal diseases (7.4%; n = 56), chronic musculoskeletal diseases (6.1%; n = 46), and cancer (4.7%; n = 36).

Analysis:

The most prevalent diagnoses faced by CUAMM EMT during its deployment referred to health problems not directly related to the conflict. Among them, the majority of cases registered were attributable to NCDs, raising interesting points of discussion concerning the management of these conditions during EMTs disaster deployment.

Type
Disaster Report
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine

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