Rohingya Refugee Camps
Cross-source consensus on Rohingya Refugee Camps from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Risks & contraindications
Background
Where it comes from
Other
Highlighted claims
- The study focused on Rohingya refugee camps and adjacent host communities in Ukhiya and Teknaf, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. — Seasonality of scabies and its association with climatic factors in Rohingya refugee camps, Cox’s Bazar: a retrospective observational study, 2021–2023
- By 31 December 2023, about 1,143,096 refugees were living in 33 densely populated camps in Cox’s Bazar. — Seasonality of scabies and its association with climatic factors in Rohingya refugee camps, Cox’s Bazar: a retrospective observational study, 2021–2023
- The camps have high population density, fragile shelters, limited infrastructure, insufficient WASH facilities, and repeated hazards. — Seasonality of scabies and its association with climatic factors in Rohingya refugee camps, Cox’s Bazar: a retrospective observational study, 2021–2023
- Refugees and displaced populations in camp settings face disproportionate scabies risk because of overcrowding, hygiene constraints, treatment barriers, and stigma or discrimination. — Seasonality of scabies and its association with climatic factors in Rohingya refugee camps, Cox’s Bazar: a retrospective observational study, 2021–2023
- Rohingya camps had previously experienced outbreaks of multiple infectious diseases, including diphtheria, measles, COVID-19, acute watery diarrhoea, and cholera. — Seasonality of scabies and its association with climatic factors in Rohingya refugee camps, Cox’s Bazar: a retrospective observational study, 2021–2023