Croatian Medical Journal
Volume 43, Issue 2, 2002, Pages 195-198

International Organization for Migration: Experience on the need for medical evacuation of refugees during the Kosovo crisis in 1999 (Article)

Szilard I.* , Cserti A. , Hoxha R. , Gorbacheva O. , O'Rourke T.
  • a Intl. Organization for Migration, Dragodan, Priština, Kosovo, Serbia
  • b Intl. Organization for Migration, Dragodan, Priština, Kosovo, Serbia
  • c Intl. Organization for Migration, Dragodan, Priština, Kosovo, Serbia
  • d Intl. Organization for Migration, Dragodan, Priština, Kosovo, Serbia
  • e Intl. Organization for Migration, Dragodan, Priština, Kosovo, Serbia

Abstract

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) developed and implemented a three-month project entitled Priority Medical Screening of Kosovar Refugees in Macedonia, within the Humanitarian Evacuation Program (HEP) for Kosovar refugees from FR Yugoslavia, which was adopted in May 1999. The project was based on all agreement with the office of United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and comprised the entry of registration data of refugees with medical condition (Priority Medical Database), and classification (Priority Medical Screening) and medical evacuation of refugees (Priority Medical Evacuation) in Macedonia. To realize the Priority Medical Screening project plan, IOM developed and set up a Medical Database linked to IOM/UNHCR HEP database, recruited and trained a four-member data entry team, worked out and set up a referral system for medical cases from the refugee camps, and established and staffed medical contact office for refugees in Skopje and Tetovo. Furthermore, it organized and staffed a mobile medical screening team, developed and implemented the system and criteria for the classification of referred medical cases, continuously registered and classified the incoming medical reports, contacted regularly the national delegates and referred to them the medically prioritized cases asking for acceptance and evacuation, and co-operated and continuously exchanged the information with UNHCR Medical Co-ordination and HEP team. Within the timeframe of the project, 1,032 medical cases were successfully evacuated for medical treatment to 25 host countries throughout the world. IOM found that those refugees suffering from health problems, who at the time of the termination of the program were still in Macedonia and had not been assisted by the project, were not likely to have been priority one cases, whose health problems could be solved only in a third country. The majority of these vulnerable people needed social rather than medical care and assistance - a challenge that international aid agencies needed to address in Macedonia and will need to address elsewhere.

Author Keywords

United Nations Relief work Macedonia (Republic) Yugoslavia War Refugees Transportation of patients

Index Keywords

training cooperation refugee developing country health care personnel register human data base international cooperation social care health program crisis intervention Yugoslavia (pre-1992) Article health care organization major clinical study migration Macedonia (republic) medical care

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0036217944&partnerID=40&md5=6d0d3bb36fed50b2ec85c188bc55c972

ISSN: 03539504
Cited by: 6
Original Language: English