Prehospital and disaster medicine : the official journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the World Association for Emergency and Disaster Medicine in association with the Acute Care Foundation
Volume 13, Issue 2-4, 1998, Pages 17-21

Mortality and morbidity among Rwandan refugees repatriated from Zaire, November, 1996. (Article)

Banatvala N.* , Roger A.J. , Denny A. , Howarth J.P.
  • a Medical Emergency Relief International (MERLIN), London, United Kingdom
  • b Medical Emergency Relief International (MERLIN), London, United Kingdom
  • c Medical Emergency Relief International (MERLIN), London, United Kingdom
  • d Medical Emergency Relief International (MERLIN), London, United Kingdom

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Following renewed ethnic violence at the end of September 1996, conflict between Tutsi rebels and the Zairian army spread to North Kivu, Zaire where approximately 700,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees resided following the 1994 genocide. After a major rebel offensive against the camps' militia groups on 15 November, a massive movement of refugees towards Rwanda through Goma town, the capital of North Kivu, began. Massive population movements such as this are likely to be associated with substantial mortality and morbidity. OBJECTIVE: To study patterns of mortality, morbidity, and health care associated with the Rwandan refugee population repatriation during November 1996. METHODS: This study observed the functioning of the health-care facilities in the Gisenyi District in Rwanda and the Goma District in Zaire, and surveyed mortality and morbidity among Rwandan refugees returning from Zaire to Rwanda. Patterns of mortality, morbidity, and health care were measured mainly by mortality and health centre consultation rates. RESULTS: Between 15 and 21 November 1996, 553,000 refugees returned to Rwanda and 4,530 (8.2/1,000 refugees) consultations took place at the border dispensary (watery diarrhea, 63%; bloody diarrhea, 1%). There were 129 (0.2/1,000) surgical admissions (72% soft tissue trauma) to the Gisenyi hospital in the subsequent two weeks. The average number of consultations from the 13 health centres during the same period was 500/day. Overall, the recorded death rate was 0.5/10,000 (all associated with diarrhea). A total of 3,586 bodies were identified in the refugee camps and surrounding areas of Goma, almost all the result of trauma. Many had died in the weeks before the exodus. Health centres were overwhelmed and many of the deficiencies in provision of health care identified in 1994 again were evident. CONCLUSIONS: Non-violent death rates were low, a reflection of the population's health status prior to migration and immunity acquired from the 1994 cholera outbreak. Health facilities were over stretched, principally because of depleted numbers of local, health-care workers associated with the 1994 genocide. Health-care facilities running parallel to the existing health-care system functioned most effectively.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

refugee Rwanda human Refugees statistics war violence health service morbidity ethnology Democratic Republic Congo Humans Adolescent preschool child Infant Child, Preschool Democratic Republic of the Congo health services Article adult Utilization Review mortality Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0032035031&doi=10.1017%2fS1049023X00030107&partnerID=40&md5=daea6628ebcf32b72b5ea8297ad1ec9d

DOI: 10.1017/S1049023X00030107
ISSN: 1049023X
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English