Primary* Refugee Arrivals to MN by Region of World 1979-2006 8000 Number of arrivals 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 Southeast Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Healthof Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department Health Eastern Europe FSU 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 0 1979 1000 Other *First resettled in Minnesota Primary Refugee Arrival, Minnesota, 2003-2006 2000 Number of Arrivals 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Month 2003 2004 Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health 2005 2006 Kittson 2006 Primary Refugee Arrival To Minnesota (N=5,354) Lake of the Woods Roseau Koochiching Marshall St. Louis Beltrami Pennington Polk Cook Clear Water Red Lake Lake Itasca Mahnomen Norman Hubbard Cass Becker Clay Aitkin Crow Wing Wadena Number of Refugees Arrival By Initial County Of Resettlement Carlton Ottertail Wilkin Pine Todd Mille Lacs Grant Douglas Stevens Pope Kanabec 0 Morrison 2-25 1- 10 Benton Traverse Stearns Isanti Big Stone Sherburne Swift Chisago 11 - 50 Washing- 51 - 100 Anoka Kandiyohi Meeker 71 Wright Chippewa Hennepin Hennepin Lac Qui Parle McLeod Renville Ram ton sey 101 - 200 Carver Scott Yellow Medicine Dakota Sibley Lincoln Lyon Redwood Le Sueur Nicollet Rice 201 - 400 Goodhue Wabasha 401 - 1000 Brown Pipestone Murray Cottonwood Rock Nobles Jackson Watonwan Blue Earth Waseca Steele Dodge Olmsted Winona 3001 - 3100 Martin Faribault Freeborn Mower Fillmore Houston Primary Refugee Arrivals, Minnesota, 2006 Hmong 4% Burma 3% FSU 2% Liberia Other 7% 6% Ethiopia 9% Somalia Somalia Ethiopia Liberia Hmong Burma FSU Other N=5,354 ““Other” includes Cambodia, Cameroon, China (also Tibet), Congo, Cuba, Eritrea, Gabon, Guinea, Iran, Kenya, Nepal, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Togo, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health Primary Refugee Arrivals Screened in Minnesota 1997-2006 8000 7352 7010 6801 7000 Number of Arrivals 6000 5323 5354 5100 4968 4895 4698 5000 3925 4013 3674 3691 4000 3154 3000 2000 2795 2536 2294 2704 1454 1365 1013 1863 1721 1448 2401 2240 2115 1033 964 890 1000 0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Arrivals Eligible for Screening 2002 2003 2004 Screened *Ineligible if moved out of state/unknown destination, unable to locate or died before screening Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health 2005 2006 Primary Refugees Lost to Follow-up Minnesota, 2006 4% 4% 3% 8% 2% 13% 48% N=656 18% Moved Out of State* Screened Elsewhere, No Results Missed Appointment Refused Screening *Ineligible for the refugee health assessment Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health Unable To Locate* Contact Failed Moved to Unknown Destination* Data Not Returned Primary Refugee Screenings by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2006 World Region Total arrivals Ineligible for Screening Number Screened (%*) Sub-Saharan Africa 4,762 441 4,148 (96) E.Asia/SE Asia 469 11 456 (100) Eastern Europe 112 1 89 (80) Latin America/ Caribbean 9 6 3 (100) North Africa/ Middle East 2 - 2 (100) Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health *Percent screened among the eligible Refugee Screening Rates by Exam Type Minnesota, 2006 96% Health Screening Rate Tuberculosis (TB) 92% Hepatitis B 91% Lead (<6 yrs old) 91% STIs 0% 4,344/4,698 97% Intestinal Parasites Malaria 4,698/4,895 82% 3% 4,570/4,698 4,292/4,698 297/328 3,830/4,698 148/4,698 10% 20% 30% Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Health Status of New Refugees, Minnesota, 2006 Health status upon arrival No (%) of refugees screened No (%) with infection among screened TB (latent or active)* 4,344 (92%) 1,990 (46%) Hep B infection** 4,570 (97%) 397 (9%) Parasitic Infection*** 4,292 (91%) 684 (16%) Sexually Transmitted 3,830 (82%) 75 (2%) Infections(STIs)**** Malaria Infection 148 (3%) Lead***** 297 (91%) 1 (<1%) 14 (5%) Total screened: N=4,698 (96% of the 4,895 eligible refugees) * Persons with Latent TB infection or suspect/active TB disease diagnosis ** Positive for Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAG) *** Positive for at least one intestinal parasite infection **** Positive for at least one STI Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health *****Children <6 year old (N=328) Tuberculosis (Latent or Active) Infection* Rate Among Refugees By Region Of Origin, Minnesota, 2006 N=4,344 screened Overall TB Infection Rate 46% Europe 50% Sub-Saharan Africa SE/East Asia 0% 1,990/4,344 42/84 49% 21% 1,855/3,824 92/431 10% *Diagnosis of Latent TB infection or Suspect/Active TB disease Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% Hepatitis B infection Rate Among Refugees by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2006 N=4,570 screened Overall Hepatitis B Infection Rate 9% 9% Sub-Saharan Africa 8% SE/East Asia Eastern Europe 0% 6% 397/4,570 355/4,033 37/448 5/84 3% Refugee Health Program, Minnesota Department of Health 6% 9% 12% 15% Intestinal Parasitic Infection* Rates Among Refugees by Region of Origin, Minnesota, 2006 N=4,292 screened Overall Parasitic Infection Rate 16% 684/4,292 22% SE/East Asia 15% 589/3,801 Sub-Saharan Africa Eastern Europe 0% 92/423 5% 3/65 5% 10% * At least one type of parasite Refugee Health Minnesota Department of nonpathogenic) Health * At least one Program, stool parasite found (including 15% 20% 25%
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz