TRAINING RESOURCES

Training resources are useful resources and recommendations for paediatric trainees looking to further their knowledge and skills in child health, and keeping themselves up-to-date.

This is a “living document”, and all external input is welcomed. To recommend additions or updates to this list please send an email to paul.torpiano@gov.mt.

Migrant Health

Resources for trainees interested in expanding their knowledge of the health of the migrant child.

I. Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children

Link: www.uaschealth.org

Description: Website run by the UASC Health Project Team based in the UK, combining the experience and resources of seven Kent Clinical Commissioning Groups, Public Health Kent, National Health Service England Safeguarding and the child and adolescent mental health service to provide English and translated information leaflets and films for children, clinical guidance, mental health recommendations, and many other resources.

II. Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health: Refugee and unaccompanied asylum-seeking children and young people – guidance for paediatricians

Link: https://www.rcpch.ac.uk/resources/refugee-unaccompanied-asylum-seeking-children-young-people

Description: Website provided by the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, UK, issuing relevant guidance for those caring for migrant children, including information on the UK asylum process, informed consent, language and interpretation services, paediatric health assessments, growth and nutrition, developmental assessment, immunisation services, communicable diseases, sexual and reproductive health, emotional wellbeing and mental health, and safeguarding. Includes a useful checklist of recommended actions, available at: https://www.gov.uk/topic/health-protection/migrant-health-guide.

III. American Association of Paediatrics/SOICH

Link: https://services.aap.org/en/community/aap-sections/international-child-health/?View={fc6f599a-1ec1-4fb9-b5b7-3b50c713a819}&SortField=Country&SortDir=Desc

Description: Website of the Section on International Child Health within the American Association of Paediatrics. Emphasises issues of international child health at large, providing numerous resources and grants for projects relating to international child health, including the International Community Access to Child Health (ICATCH) program dedicated to providing technical and financial support to paediatric services helping low-resource communities outside the United States.

I. MSc in Migrant Health – University of Pecs, Hungary

Link: http://www.migranthealthmsc.eu/news/11-msc-in-migration-health

Description: Course offering systematic education and training in public health and health care services, focusing on the new challenges arising from an increasing ethnic, cultural and language diversity brought my migrants.

II. Postgraduate training course: Specialist in Migration Health – University of Pecs, Hungary

Link: https://thbregionalimplementationinitiative.files.wordpress.com/2017/10/leaflet_postgraduate-specialist-training-course-in-migration-health.pdf

Description: Postgraduate training course aiming to empower professionals with a multidisciplinary knowledge and skills surrounding the health and public health aspects of migration. Covers various fields including direct health assistance, ‘migrant-sensitive’ healthcare system planning, health policy, adapted sociology and health economics, and the importance of intercultural competences.

III. ESCMID study group for infections in travelers and migrants.

Link: https://www.escmid.org/research_projects/study_groups/travel_and_migration/

Description: This ESCMID study group focuses on infections in travelers and migrants. Subscribe for dates for future courses and to participate in discussions on migrant health.

I. Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children

Link: www.uaschealth.org

Description: Website run by the UASC Health Project Team based in the UK, combining the experience and resources of seven Kent Clinical Commissioning Groups, Public Health Kent, National Health Service England Safeguarding and the child and adolescent mental health service to provide English and translated information leaflets and films for children, clinical guidance, mental health recommendations, and many other resources.

IV. MSc migration, culture and global health – Queen Mary University, London.

Link: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/postgraduate/taught/coursefinder/courses/200392.html

Description: Course offering training to respond to the needs of migrants related to their social, cultural, and political identities, social welfare, humanitarian needs, and their legal, citizenship, and rights-based concerns, especially where these intersect with health and healthcare.

V. MSc Migration and Health – University of Bergen.

Link: https://www.uib.no/en/course/INTH344

Description: Provides knowledge about immigrant health and health rights from both a Norwegian and an international perspective. Covers the main features of somatic and mental health including life trajectories, reasons for migration, and migrant status as determinants of health. Focuses on practical communication skills for intercultural clinical encounters, as well as evaluation of research in this scientific area.

I. International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care

Link: https://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/journal/ijmhsc?id=ijmhsc

Description: Double blind peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal focusing on how international migration relates to health and social care issues, including mental health

II. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health

Link: https://www.springer.com/journal/10903

Description: International forum for the publication of peer-reviewed original research pertaining to immigrant health.

III. Archives of disease in childhood: Medical and social issues of child refugees in Europe.

Link: https://adc.bmj.com/content/101/9/839

Description: Paper outlining the medical and social issues of child refugees in Europe (Williams et al, 2016).

II. CDC: refugee health guidelines

III. CMAJ: clinical guidelines for immigrants and refugees

IV: ECDC: guidelines on screening and vaccination for infectious diseases in newly-arrived migrants

I. The Hospital for Sick Children Handbook of Paediatrics – Chapter 19: Infectious diseases/immigrant and refugee children

Link: https://www.elsevier.ca/ca/product.jsp?isbn=9781771720519

Description: Offers most current diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to paediatric clinical problems, providing succinct, easily accessible, and evidence-based answers for the diagnosis and management of paediatric problems.

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Core-MD Project

Coordinating Research and Evidence for Medical Devices (CORE-MD)

New ways to test high-risk medical devices.

 

Manufacturers of medical devices need to test their products before being allowed to market them. Specifically, they require clinical data showing their medical device is safe and efficient. In this context, the EU-funded CORE-MD project will translate expert scientific and clinical evidence on study designs for evaluating high-risk medical devices into advice for EU regulators. The project will propose how new trial designs can contribute and suggest ways to aggregate real-world data from medical device registries.


It will also conduct multidisciplinary workshops to propose a hierarchy of levels of evidence from clinical investigations, as well as educational and training objectives for all stakeholders, to build expertise in regulatory science in Europe. CORE–MD will translate expert scientific and clinical evidence on study designs for evaluating high-risk medical devices into advice for EU regulators, to achieve an appropriate balance between innovation, safety, and effectiveness. A unique collaboration between medical associations, regulatory agencies, notified bodies, academic institutions, patients’ groups, and health technology assessment agencies, will systematically review methodologies for the clinical investigation of high-risk medical devices, recommend how new trial designs can contribute, and advise on methods for aggregating real-world data from medical device registries with experience from clinical practice The consortium is led by the European Society of Cardiology and the European Federation of National Associations of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, and involves all 33 specialist medical associations that are members of the Biomedical Alliance in Europe.

EAP Representative: