A review of the literature on sexual and reproductive health of African migrant and refugee children
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Springer
Abstract
Background: Migration and involuntary displacement of children and young people have recently become common
features of many African countries due to widespread poverty, rapid urbanization, joblessness, and instability
that motivate them to seek livelihoods away from their places of origin. With limited education and skills, children
become vulnerable socioeconomically, thereby exposing themselves to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) risks.
Methods: Against this background, the authors undertook a scoping review of the existing literature between
January and June 2019 to highlight current knowledge on SRH of African migrant and refugee children. Twenty-two
studies that met the inclusion criteria were reviewed.
Results: The results identified overcrowding and sexual exploitation of children within refugee camps where
reproductive health services are often limited and underutilized. They also reveal language barriers as key obstacles
towards young migrants’ access to SRH information and services because local languages used to deliver these
services are alien to the migrants. Further, cultural practices like genital cutting, which survived migration could have
serious reproductive health implications for young migrants. A major gap identified is about SRH risk factors of unaccompanied
migrant minors, which have received limited study, and calls for more quantitative and qualitative SRH
studies on unaccompanied child migrants. Studies should also focus on the different dimensions of SRH challenges
among child migrants differentiated by gender, documented or undocumented, within or across national borders,
and within or outside refugee camps to properly inform and situate policies, keeping in mind the economic motive
and spatial displacement of children as major considerations.
Conclusion: The conditions that necessitate economic-driven migration of children will continue to exist in sub-
Saharan Africa. This will provide fertile grounds for child migration to continue to thrive, with diverse sexual and
reproductive health risks among the child migrants. There is need for further quantitative and qualitative research on
child migrants’ sexual and reproductive health experiences paying special attention to their differentiation by gender,
documented or undocumented, within or across national borders and within or outside refugee camps.
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Research Article