National Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention - Background Paper 4: Health and Nutrition
National Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention
Background Papers Index
Background Paper 4: Health
and Nutrition
1.
States Parties recognize the right of the child to the enjoyment of
the highest attainable standard of health and to facilities for the
treatment of illness and rehabilitation of health. States Parties shall
strive to ensure that no child is deprived of his or her right of access
to such health care services.
Article
24, Convention on the Rights of the Child.
1.
The States Parties to the present Covenant recognize the right of everyone
to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and
mental health.
Article
12, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. [1]
Health
is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not
merely the absence of disease or infirmity.
World
Health Organisation definition of "health" in the Preamble
to the Constitution of the World Health Organisation.
In this Background
Paper
- National
Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention
- Child
asylum seekers
- The
right to health: core obligations
- Food
and nutrition
- Hygiene
and sanitation
- Clothing
and bedding
- Shelter
and environment
- Physical
activity
- Health
services and assessment
- Questions
for submissions
1. National
Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention
In November 2001,
the Human Rights Commissioner announced an Inquiry into the adequacy and
appropriateness of Australia's treatment of child asylum seekers and other
children who are, or have been, held in immigration detention. The terms
of reference for the Inquiry include consideration of the health of child
asylum seekers and the impact of immigration detention on the well being
and healthy development of children. [2]
This background paper
provides an overview of international human rights standards on health
that are relevant to the Inquiry. It refers primarily to the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (the Convention) but also to other international
human rights standards (including the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) where relevant. [3]
This paper is intended
as a reference and guide to individuals or organisations wishing to make
a submission to the Inquiry. It should be consulted where relevant, but
it is not necessary to refer to a background paper when making a submission.
For further information about the Inquiry, general information on relevant
international treaties and standards and the material used in the background
papers, see Background Paper 1: Introduction.
This and other background papers are available on the Human Rights and
Equal Opportunity Commission web site at http://www.humanrights.gov.au/human_rights/children_detention/background.html.
The term "child
asylum seeker" is used throughout the background papers. While the
focus in these papers is on children who have been detained when seeking
asylum in Australia, it is not intended to exclude other children who
have been detained. The Inquiry relates to any child who is, or who has
been, in immigration detention. "Child" refers to any person
under the age of 18.
Treaties,
Rules and Guidelines
- Treaties that have been ratified by Australia, such as the Convention
on the Rights of the Child, are binding on Australia in international
law. The implementation of treaty rights of people in Australia are
monitored by United Nations treaty bodies, such as the Committee on
the Rights of the Child or the Human Rights Committee.
- The
fact that Australia has ratified a treaty does not automatically incorporate
it into Australian domestic law. Only when treaty provisions are incorporated
into Australian law do they create enforceable rights in Australia.
However, courts should interpret a law to be consistent with the provisions
of a treaty that Australia has ratified.
- Other
international documents and instruments such as United Nations Rules,
General Comments by treaty bodies, United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees guidelines, United Nations General Assembly Declarations
and publications by United Nations agencies are not binding on Australia
as a matter of international law. They are, however, persuasive in
interpreting treaties and contain goals and aspirations reflecting
a consensus of world opinion.
2. Child
asylum seekers
Child asylum seekers
are likely to have experienced varying levels of violence and human rights
abuses before or during their journey to Australia. The child's flight
from her or his home country may include experiences of war, persecution,
death, sexual assault, violence, fear, flight and displacement. These
experiences make the child vulnerable to disease, trauma and other threats
to their health, such as nutritional deficiencies.
Under the Convention,
Australia must ensure that every child in Australia, regardless of nationality
or immigration status and regardless of how the child arrived in Australia,
enjoys the highest attainable standard of health and rehabilitation. [4] The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child [5] has on
several occasions raised the issue of child asylum seekers and pointed
out that the Convention accords them the same rights as other children
in relation to health care. [6]
The health needs
of child asylum seekers are, however, often far greater than those of
children raised in Australia, due to the damaging physical conditions,
emotional trauma and nutritional deficiencies that they have commonly
experienced.
The Inquiry welcomes
submissions on the appropriateness and relevance for child asylum seekers
of the health care standards in Australian State and Territories. The
Inquiry also welcomes submissions on the needs of unaccompanied children
and the impact on their health of having no parent or adult caring for
their physical health, nutritional and emotional well being.
3. The right
to health: core obligations
The UN Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has identified six core obligations
on the right to health under article 12, ICESCR, which include:
- access to health
facilities
- nutritionally
adequate and safe food
- basic shelter,
sanitation and safe drinking water
- essential drugs
- equitable distribution
of all health facilities
- a public health
strategy and plan of action. [7]
In considering the
right to health, the underlying principles of the Convention should be
always considered. All actions concerning the child should be non-discriminatory
(article 2), ensure the best interests of the child (article 3) and allow
the child to participate in decision making concerning her or him (article
12). [8]
4. Food
and nutrition
States
Parties shall pursue full implementation of [the right of the child
to the highest attainable standard of health] and, in particular, shall
take measures to combat disease and malnutrition through
the provision of adequate nutritious foods.
Article
24, Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Food has critical
nutritional, cultural and social dimensions for the well being and development
of all children. According to the World Declaration and Plan of Action
for Nutrition, [9] children are the most nutritionally
vulnerable group of people in the world. This is especially true for child
asylum seekers whose access to nutritional food may have been seriously
limited for prolonged periods in their countries of origin and during
the course of their journey to Australia. [10]
Nutrition
In becoming a party
to the Convention, Australia has committed to provide every child
in Australia with the highest attainable standard of health, including
providing adequate nutritious foods. What is "adequate" will
depend on the particular nutritional needs of each child.
The maintenance of
appropriate nutritional standards is vital to the normal healthy development
of every child. [11] The nutritional needs of child
asylum seekers are generally related to micro-nutrient deficiencies caused
by conditions in the child's country of origin, the often long and arduous
journey to Australia and the unfamiliar food and conditions upon arrival
in Australia.
Assessment of a child's nutritional
needs
There is general
international consensus that the best way to measure a child's health
and nutritional status is by assessing the individual child's growth against
standard weight-for-height, height-for-age and weight-for-age charts such
as those produced by the World Health Organisation, taking into account
cultural and geographic differences in child development.[12] In order to evaluate a child's nutritional needs, there should be an initial
assessment of the child's height and weight upon arrival, and careful
ongoing monitoring of any micronutrient deficiencies that the child may
have. [13]
Health screening
and assessment should be made by medical practitioners who are familiar
with the particular deficiencies suffered by children from developing
countries and refugee backgrounds (which may not be prevalent among Australian
children), taking into account the history and background of each child.
Special care must be taken when establishing the background of an unaccompanied
child whose knowledge of his or her personal history is likely to be incomplete
(see Background Paper 7: Legal Status).
In assessing the
nutritional adequacy of the food provided to child asylum seekers, an
appropriate starting point is Article 24(2)(c) of the Convention. International
studies have shown that nutritional deficiencies in refugee camps and
countries of origin of asylum seekers are widespread [14] and must be taken into account when determining the nutritional adequacy
of the food provided to each child.
The nutritional needs of pregnant
women and mothers
The Plan of Action
arising out of the 1990 World Summit for Children states that "[m]aternal
health, nutrition and education are important for the survival and well-being
of women in their own right and are key determinants of the health and
well-being of the child in early infancy." [15] Australia is obliged under Article 24(2)(d) of the Convention to "ensure
appropriate pre-natal and post-natal care for mothers". [16] This includes ensuring that the special nutritional needs of pregnant
women and new mothers are met. Poor maternal nutrition is associated with
various disorders in babies and with low birth weight.[17] Mothers also have increased nutritional needs whilst breastfeeding and
may need education and encouragement to breastfeed their babies. The World
Health Organisation recommends exclusive breastfeeding for six months,
with introduction of complementary foods and continued breastfeeding thereafter
as an important aspect of a baby's diet. [18]
Cultural considerations
In
those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities or
persons of indigenous origin exist, a child belonging to such a minority
shall not be denied the right, in community with other members
of his or her group, to enjoy his or her own culture [or] to profess
and practise his or her own religion.
Article
30, Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Serious micronutrient
deficiencies in child asylum seekers may be the result of the child having
experienced disruption to family and cultural associations with food during
flight. This may be due to separation from family members usually responsible
for food preparation, or not being able to fulfil cultural or religious
practices surrounding food preparation and consumption. This is especially
true for unaccompanied children. According to the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), when addressing malnutrition in refugee
children it is vital to consider the cultural acceptability, palatability
and digestibility of the food provided, in addition to its nutritional
quality. [19] Cultural considerations must be taken
into account with respect to food type, preparation and serving, particularly
considering the traditional roles of family members in relation to the
child's food. It is therefore vital that children in immigration detention
are provided with food that is culturally and religiously appropriate [20] and that it is possible for the child's family
members to prepare and serve the food in accordance with the family's
cultural practices (including appropriate times of day). The Inquiry welcomes
submissions on this point.
Water
States
Parties shall pursue full implementation of [the right to health] and,
in particular, shall take appropriate measures to combat disease
and malnutrition through the provision of adequate clean
drinking-water, taking into consideration the dangers and risks of environmental
pollution.
Article
24(2)(c), Convention on the Rights of the Child.
A major factor affecting
the health of children as well as adults is the availability of clean
water. [21] Australia is obliged under the Convention
to provide every child in immigration detention with adequate clean drinking
water. The drinking water provided to children in immigration detention
should be readily available and easily accessible at all times. The UNHCR
recommends that a minimum of twenty litres of drinkable water is required
for each person every day for cooking and drinking. [22]
5. Hygiene
and sanitation
The environment in
detention facilities may give rise to conditions for the spread of infection
and disease among children unless appropriate hygiene and sanitation measures
are put in place. The risk of a child contracting an illness due to poor
hygiene is heightened for a child asylum seeker whose immune system may
be functioning at a sub-optimal level due to previous illness, poor nutritional
status or absence of immunisations.
Hygiene and sanitation
are therefore key issues in terms of both appropriate facilities and education
for children and their families. In terms of facilities, the UNHCR recommends
that there be at least one toilet for every twenty people, with family
toilets serving six to eight people being preferable. [23] Toilets must be constructed, located and lit to ensure safety and ease
of use for children.[24] Bathing and showering facilities
should enable every child to maintain general hygiene by bathing or showering
daily in privacy at a temperature suitable to the climate. [25]
In order to prevent
illness and disease among children in an immigration detention setting,
it is vital that high standards of personal hygiene be maintained. Australia
is obliged under article 24(2)(e) of the Convention to ensure that parents
and children "are informed, have access to education and are supported
in the use of basic knowledge of hygiene and environmental sanitation".
All adolescents should receive appropriate information and counselling
about their health. The realisation of their right to health is dependent
on youth-friendly health care which respects confidentiality and privacy
and includes appropriate sexual and reproductive health care advice.[26]
6. Clothing
and bedding
Detention
facilities should ensure that each juvenile has personal clothing suitable
for the climate and adequate to ensure good health, and which should
in no manner be degrading or humiliating.
Rule
36, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of
their Liberty.
In order to prevent
illness and infection, it is important that children have sufficient changes
of clean clothing, particularly underwear, and suitable footwear. Australia
should ensure there are appropriate facilities for children and their
families to clean and maintain clothing. [27] Children's
underclothing should be changed and washed as often as necessary for the
maintenance of hygiene. [28]
In keeping with the
requirement that clothing not be degrading or humiliating,[29] clothing provided to children in immigration detention should be culturally
acceptable and modest where necessary.
Children must also
be provided with clothing that is appropriate to the climate and gives
effective protection from rain and sun.[30] Whilst young
children are usually more vulnerable to the cold than adults, child asylum
seekers are especially susceptible to illness where they have had nutritional
deficiencies and prior illnesses.
Each child in immigration
detention should be provided with separate and sufficient bedding, which
should be clean when issued, kept in good order and changed often enough
to ensure cleanliness. [31] As with clothing, children's
bedding should be appropriate to the climate, with sufficient blankets
provided where necessary.
7. Shelter
and environment
The
availability, distribution and location of shelter, schools, playgrounds,
waterpoints, health centres and recreational facilities all affect the
safety and well-being of refugee children.
UNHCR
Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch 5.
The design and layout
of detention facilities raises issues of children's safety, security,
privacy, play and physical activity needs.
It is important for
the health, psychological and physical needs of children that there be
sufficient space in detention facilities. Children and families must have
sufficient space to allow them a minimum degree of privacy in order to
maintain some semblance of family life. [32] The UNHCR
recommends a minimum of 3.5 square metres living space per person within
a shelter and thirty square metres per person gross area for the overall
site, excluding playgrounds and sports fields. [33] The UNHCR recommends that the standards of space, privacy and freedom
of movement must be adequate for parents to meet the developmental needs
of their children and to raise them with dignity. [34]
Detention facilities
should be designed with a view to ensuring families' and children's personal
security. The layout should ensure that children are close to all basic
facilities and are provided with protection from the elements. This may
mean establishing several community entities for larger groups of asylum
seekers, each with its own communal basic facilities.[35]
Children in detention
facilities are extremely susceptible to accidents. [36] The environment in the centre should be designed to avoid accidents, and
parents should be advised as to how to prevent their children suffering
accidents in their new and foreign environment. [37] Effort should be taken to prevent children suffering accidental burns
or poisoning, and to ensure that there are no dangerous areas or objects
around the detention facility that may give rise to accidents. [38]
Accident prevention
also includes ensuring that there are plenty of safe play spaces for children
so that that they do not have to seek alternate play spaces that may be
away from parental supervision or otherwise dangerous. [39] Shade is important for play spaces, both to protect from the sun and to
make play spaces comfortable for children so that they will use them.
The Inquiry welcomes
submissions on the adequacy and appropriateness of the design of detention
facilities and whether the child's privacy, recreation and play areas
are appropriate (see also Background Paper
3: Mental Health and Development).
8. Physical
activity
States
Parties shall ensure to the maximum extent possible the survival and
development of the child.
Article
6(2), Convention on the Rights of the Child.
State
Parties recognize the right of the child to rest and leisure, to engage
in play and recreational activities appropriate to the age of the child
and to participate freely in cultural life and the arts.
Article
31(1), Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Rest, leisure, play
and recreation are vital for the healthy development of the child. In
order to ensure the appropriate development of children in immigration
detention and provide them with the highest attainable standard of health,
they must be provided with opportunities, spaces, equipment and education
that encourage and facilitate physical activity and sport. [40]
Interaction with the physical environment is stated to be an innate
and necessary propensity in all people, including children.[41] The quality of play experience for children will be related to the environment
in which it takes place.
9. Health
services and assessment
2.
States Parties shall pursue full implementation of this right and, in
particular, shall take appropriate measures (f) [t]o develop preventive
health care, guidance for parents and family planning education and
services.
Article
24, Convention on the Rights of the Child.
The
right to health must be understood as a right to the enjoyment of a
variety of facilities, goods, services and conditions necessary for
the realization of the highest attainable standard of health.
Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment 14, 4 July
2000, para 9.
Australia has recognised
the right of every child to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard
of health and to facilities for the treatment of illness and rehabilitation
of health. [42] As outlined in Background
Paper 3: Mental Health and Development, States Parties to the
Convention are required to "develop preventive health care"
in addition to providing education and guidance to parents.
Each child asylum
seeker should receive medical treatment and care in a manner which is
culturally appropriate and which respects her or his inherent dignity.
The relevant standard must be commensurate with that provided in the general
community, taking into account the special needs of child asylum seekers
outlined earlier. [43] The Inquiry welcomes submissions
on the appropriate health care standards for children immigration detention.
Initial
assessment of a child's health care needs
Every
juvenile has a right to be examined by a physician immediately upon
admission to a detention facility, for the purpose of recording any
evidence of prior ill-treatment and identifying any physical or mental
condition requiring medical attention;
The
medical services provided to juveniles should seek to detect and should
treat any physical or mental illness, substance abuse or other condition
that may hinder the integration of the juvenile into society. Every
detention facility for juveniles should have immediate access to adequate
medical facilities and equipment appropriate to the number and requirements
of its residents and staff trained in preventive health care and the
handling of medical emergencies. Every juvenile who is ill, who complains
of illness or who demonstrates symptoms of physical or mental difficulties,
should be examined promptly by a medical officer.
Rules
50-51, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty
In order to be provided
with preventive health care and with the highest attainable standard of
health and access to appropriate facilities as outlined in the Convention,
each child asylum seeker should undergo a medical examination and health
care needs assessment by trained health professionals on arrival in Australia. [44] Examination of the child "by a physician immediately
upon admission to a detention facility" should record and identify
"any physical or mental condition requiring medical attention". [45] The medical assessment should seek to identify
any physical or mental condition requiring medical attention, including
the effects of any previous abuse or violence. [46] Medical care, where possible, should be provided to detained children
"through the appropriate health facilities and services of the community
in which the detention facility is located". [47]
As children may come
from countries that do not have a policy for neo-natal or post-natal screening
of some medical conditions, children should be examined for these upon
arrival, with referral to a paediatrician if any of these conditions are
suspected. [48] The Inquiry welcomes submissions from
health care experts on the appropriate initial assessment procedures for
children in immigration detention.
Australia's obligations
under the Convention extend beyond merely treating illness to ensuring
the development of the child to the maximum possible extent, [49] and preventing, treating and rehabilitating disabilities. [50] The Inquiry welcomes submissions on assessment and screening needs for
developmental delay, delay in walking, poor visual fixation or uncertainty
about response to sound. Assessment may be required for learning difficulties
that may be due to hearing, vision or developmental problems. The rights
of children with permanent disabilities are discussed in Background
Paper 5: Prevention, Treatment and Accommodation of Disabilities.
Ongoing
medical care
States
Parties shall pursue full implementation of this right and, in particular,
shall take appropriate measures: (b) To ensure the provision
of necessary medical assistance and health care to all children with
emphasis on the development of primary health care.
Article
24(2), Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Every
juvenile shall receive adequate medical care, both preventive and remedial,
including dental, ophthalmological and mental health care, as well as
pharmaceutical products and special diets as medically indicated. All
such medical care should, where possible, be provided to detained juveniles
through the appropriate health facilities and services of the community
in which the detention facility is located, in order to prevent stigmatization
of the juvenile and promote self-respect and integration into the community.
Rule
49, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of
their Liberty. [51]
After initial assessment
and treatment when they first arrive in Australia, child asylum seekers
have the right to "necessary medical assistance and health care
with emphasis on the development of primary health care" under article
24(2)(b) of the Convention. This requires the health care needs of children
in immigration detention to be regularly monitored.[52] In order to ensure that every child receives 'preventive and remedial'
health care, health care programs may need to be individualised and coordinated.
Such programs should include a structured immunisation program for all
child asylum seekers under Article 24(2)(a) of the Convention, in accordance
with the relevant national standards. [53] All medical
records of the child should be recorded on a confidential file (see Background
Paper 7: Legal Status).
The Inquiry welcomes
submissions on the form primary health care should take and whether this
requires an individual health care plan to be implemented for each child
in immigration detention. The Inquiry also welcomes submissions on the
appropriate health care models for child asylum seekers and how health
care in detention facilities compares with health care in Australia's
States and Territories, including the necessary ratio of medical professionals
to children in immigration detention.
Medical personnel
should be trained in cross-cultural health care, including the special
needs of child asylum seekers. [54] Care should be taken
for children who may feel uncomfortable in discussing their health problems
openly (especially if they relate to past sexual or violent incidents)
or who are fearful about the proposed examination or treatment. Studies
indicate that child asylum seekers may focus on non-specific pain as their
main concern, avoiding mention of specific details or psychological symptoms. [55] Unaccompanied children may require special support
in health care, as they may not have an adult carer to bring them to the
attention of medical authorities. Medical communications with a child
asylum seeker may need to utilise an interpreter unless the child is able
and comfortable in discussing health matters in English. [56] The Inquiry welcomes submissions on these points.
Dental Care
Dental health care
is important for child asylum seekers, particularly younger children.
Australia should ensure that preventive and remedial dental health care
is available to all child asylum seekers.[57] Preventing,
identifying and treating decay in a timely manner reduces the need for
extractions. The detention of child asylum seekers should not result in
their dental health being adversely affected. The Inquiry welcomes submissions
on this point, including reference to relevant Australian State and Territory
standards on dental health for children.
Ante-natal
care and birth
States
parties shall take appropriate measures to ensure appropriate
pre-natal and post-natal health care for mothers.
Article
24 (2)(d), Convention on the Rights of the Child.
2 States
Parties shall ensure to women appropriate services in connection with
pregnancy, confinement and the post-natal period, granting free services
where necessary, as well as adequate nutrition during pregnancy and
lactation.
Article
12, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women.
Paediatric specialists
have suggested that appropriate pre-natal health care includes providing
pregnant women with services (including counselling) for ante-natal screening
for malformation, hepatitis B, HIV and haemoglobinopathies.[58] Given the impact that a pregnant woman's emotional wellbeing may have
on the health of her child, [59] the health and mental
health of pregnant women in immigration detention may need to be monitored
and access to specialist mental health services made available.
The Inquiry will
consider the extent to which women asylum seekers should be given access
to similar childbirth facilities that are available to non-asylum seeking
women giving birth in public hospital facilities. Arrangements should
be made wherever practicable for children to be born in a hospital outside
the detention centre, and special accommodation should be provided for
all necessary pre-natal and post-natal care and treatment. [60]
After birth, infants
and children under five years may require access to early childhood services.
These services typically include help with feeding difficulties, [61] guidance on the child's feeding needs and day-to-day care, education on
child development, counselling for post-natal depression, and advice concerning
the child's immunisation program and parenting in general. Interpreters
should be available where necessary. The Inquiry welcomes submissions
on this point. The Inquiry also welcomes submissions on the screening
and health needs of newborn babies.
As outlined earlier,
the World Health Organisation, in addition to UNICEF, [62] has stressed the importance of breastfeeding to a baby's diet, including
its extensive nutritional, immunological and psychological benefits. Where
the mother is having difficulties breastfeeding, early assistance from
a health professional experienced in breastfeeding management, a lactation
consultant or a breastfeeding counsellor should be provided.
10. Questions
for submissions
The following questions
relate to the maintenance of a child asylum seeker's health while in immigration
detention and may assist organisations and individuals in making submissions
to the Inquiry.
- How does Australia
meet its commitments to the health of child asylum seekers under article
24, Convention and article 12, ICESCR, with regard to its legislation,
policy and practice?
- What are the
relevant Australian State and Territory standards and practices on health
care provision?
- What coordination,
if any, is there across government departments to ensure the health
care needs of child asylum seekers are met? To what extent are relevant
professional bodies involved in outlining these standards?
- What are the
initial assessment and screening procedures in place for child asylum
seekers? Are there any gaps?
- Are individual
health care programs in "the best interests of the child"?
How do they work?
- How does health
care work in practice in detention facilities?
- Are there adequate
and suitable staff?
- How can a child
asylum seeker access health care?
- How are pregnant
mothers and families supported in immigration detention?
ENDNOTES:
See General Comment 14 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights (CESCR): General Comment 14: The right to the highest attainable
standard of health, UN Doc E/C.12/2000/4, 11 Aug 2000, which elaborates
the provisions of article 12 of the IESCR. The Committee has referred
to article 12 as being the most comprehensive provision on the right to
health in international human rights law. It imposes on State Parties
a binding duty to ensure that each person can control her or his own health
and body, including sexual and reproductive freedom, and "the right
to a system of health protection which provides equality of opportunity
for people to enjoy the highest attainable level of health.": CESCR, General Comment 14: The right to the highest attainable standard of
health, UN Doc E/C.12/2000/4, 4 July 2000, para 8.
The full terms of reference are available at http://www.humanrights.gov.au/human_rights/children_detention/terms.html.
International instruments and guidelines such as the United Nations
Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty (1990)
and UNHCR (1994), Refugee Children: Guidelines on Protection and Care,
Geneva (UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care). These standards are
outlined in greater detail in Background
Paper 1: Introduction.
Article 24, Convention, read in light of the principle of non-discrimination
in Article 2. Background Paper 1: Introduction.
The Committee supervises the Convention of the same name; see Background
Paper 1: Introduction.
See for example the Committee on the Rights of the Child, Concluding
Observations of the Committee on the Rights of the Child: Denmark (Initial report), UN Doc CRC/15/Add.33.m, 15 Feb 1995, para 14.
In CESCR, General Comment 14, para 43, the Committee outlines the
State's core obligations in relation to health as at least the following
obligations:
"(a) To ensure the right of access to health facilities, goods and
services on a non-discriminatory basis, especially for vulnerable or marginalized
groups;
(b) To ensure access to the minimum essential food which is nutritionally
adequate and safe, to ensure freedom from hunger to everyone;
(c) To ensure access to basic shelter, housing and sanitation, and an
adequate supply of safe and potable water;
(d) To provide essential drugs, as from time to time defined under the
WHO Action Programme on Essential Drugs;
(e) To ensure equitable distribution of all health facilities, goods and
services;
(f) To adopt and implement a national public health strategy and plan
of action, on the basis of epidemiological evidence, addressing the health
concerns of the whole population; the strategy and plan of action shall
be devised, and periodically reviewed, on the basis of a participatory
and transparent process; they shall include methods, such as right to
health indicators and benchmarks, by which progress can be closely monitored;
the process by which the strategy and plan of action are devised, as well
as their content, shall give particular attention to all vulnerable or
marginalized groups." See too paras 53-54.
See Background Paper 1: Introduction.
International Conference on Nutrition, Rome, December 1992. See http://www.fao.org/docrep/u5900t/u5900t01.htm.
Many asylum seekers arrive in countries of asylum in poor health as a
consequence of past deprivation and prolonged periods with a sub-optimal
diet. See LK Ackerman, 'Health problems of refugees', Journal of American
Board of Family Practice, 10(5) p337 cited in C Burns, K Webster,
P Crotty, M Balinger, R Vincenzo and M Rozman (2000) 'Easing the transition:
food and nutrition issues of new arrivals', Health Promotion Journal
of Australia, 10(3), p230 at p231.
UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch4.
World Health Organisation, WHO Global Database on Child Growth and
Malnutrition, http://www.who.int/nutgrowthdb/intro_text.htm,
8 August 2001. Weight and height measures are appropriate for children.
The appropriate measure for babies is length.
See article 24(2), Convention. See also the Plan of Action for Implementing
the World Declaration on the Survival, Protection and Development of Children
in the 1990s, UNICEF, 1990: See http://www.unicef.org/wsc/plan.htm#Food.
M Toole (1992), 'Micronutrient deficiencies in refugees', The Lancet, 339: 121 pp1-15 (C Burns, K Webster, P Crotty, M Balinger, R Vincenzo
and M Rozman (2000) 'Easing the transition: food and nutrition issues
of new arrivals', 10(3), p231.
15 Plan of Action for Implementing the World Declaration on the Survival,
Protection and Development of Children in the 1990s, UNICEF, 1990; http://www.unicef.org/wsc/plan.htm#Role.
See also article 12(2), Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW),
ratified by Australia in 1983, which obliges it to "ensure to women
appropriate services in connection with pregnancy, confinement and the
post-natal period, granting free services where necessary, as well as
adequate nutrition during pregnancy and lactation."
Poor nutrition in pregnant women may cause spina bifida (associated with
inadequate folate intake) and iodine deficiency disorders (permanent mental
retardation associated with inadequate iodine intake): The Royal College
of Paediatrics and Child Health and the King's Fund (1999), The Health
of Refugee Children: Guidelines for Paediatricians, London.
World Health Organisation (2001), 'Note for the Press No.7', 2 April 2001; http://www.who.int/inf-pr-2001/en/note2001-07.html.
UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
20 General Comment 22 of the Human Rights Committee (which supervises
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights) states
that "[t]he observance and practice of religion or belief may include
not only ceremonial acts but also such customs as the observance of dietary
regulations "; General comment 22: The right to freedom of
thought, conscience and religion ( Art. 18), 30 July 1993.
21 Plan of Action for Implementing the World Declaration on the Survival,
Protection and Development of Children in the 1990s, UNICEF, 1990.
See http://www.unicef.org/wsc/plan.htm#Child.
UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
Rules 13,15 and 16, United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment
of Prisoners (1955); Rule 34, United Nations Rules for the Protection
of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty; also Guideline 10(ix), UNHCR
(1999), Guidelines on applicable Criteria and Standards relating to
the Detention of Asylum-Seekers (UNHCR Guidelines on Detention) (1999).
CESCR, General Comment 14, para 23.
Rule 18, Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners.
Rule 17(2), Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners.
Rule 33, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty; Rule 19, Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of
Prisoners.
Guideline 9.5, Immigration Detention Guidelines, issued by the
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, March 2000.
Rule 33, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty.
UNHCR, Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
UNHCR, Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
UNHCR, Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
UNHCR, Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and the King's Fund
(1999), The Health of Refugee Children: Guidelines for Paediatricians,
p10.
Under Article 24(2)(e), Convention, Australia is obliged "to ensure
that all segments of society, in particular parents and children, are
informed, have access to education and are supported in the use of basic
knowledge of the prevention of accidents".
See discussion in Background Paper 3:
Mental Health and Development.
UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch5.
See Background Paper 3: Mental Health
and Development.
See Background Paper 3: Mental Health
and Development.
Article 24, Convention.
Article 12, IESCR; article 24, Convention; Principle 24, Body of Principles
for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment.
Rule 50, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty. The purpose of the examination must be clearly explained
to the child in terms they can understand, and the child's consent should
be sought. Suitable interpreters should be used, where necessary, to ensure
that a valid consent is obtained. The Royal College of Paediatrics and
Child Health and the King's Fund (1999), The Health of Refugee Children:
Guidelines for Paediatricians, p9.
Rule 50, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty. Each institution should have at least "one
qualified medical officer who should have some knowledge of psychiatry.
The medical services should be organized in close relationship to the
general health administration of the community or nation. They shall include
a psychiatric service for the diagnosis and, in proper cases, the treatment
of states of mental abnormality." See also Rule 22(1), Standard
Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners.
Principle 24, Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons
under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment (1988); Rule 50, UN
Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty, Guideline
10, UNHCR Guidelines on Detention.
Rule 49, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty. This is in order "to prevent stigmatization
of the juvenile and promote self-respect and integration into the community".
See CESCR, General Comment 14, para 14. Conditions could phenylketonuria,
hypothyroidism, cataracts, congenital cardiac disease or congenital hip
dislocation. Children should also be screened on arrival for HIV, gastroenteritis,
tuberculosis, hepatitis B, malaria, typhoid and schistosomiasis. See the
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and the King's Fund (1999), The Health of Refugee Children: Guidelines for Paediatricians,
p10.
Article 6, Convention.
Article 23, Convention.
See also Principle 24, Body of Principles for the Protection of All
Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment: "A proper
medical examination shall be offered to a detained or imprisoned person
as promptly as possible after his admission to the place of detention
or imprisonment, and thereafter medical care and treatment shall be provided
whenever necessary. This care and treatment shall be provided free of
charge."
Article 25, Convention, which details the child's right to periodic review
of her or his treatment.
See The Australian Immunisation Handbook 8th Edition, Australian Government Department on Health and Ageing (2003).
In particular, all children should be immunised against diptheria,
tetanus, whooping cough, poliomyelitis, measles, mumps and rubella at
the appropriate stage within their first year or shortly thereafter. http://www1.health.gov.au/immhandbook/pdf/handbook.pdf
See UNHCR Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch4, also discussed in Background
Paper 2: Culture and Identity and Background
Paper 3: Mental Health and Development. Experience in treating
refugee and asylum seeking children will guard against making erroneous
diagnoses or missing important information (such as evidence of torture).
A UK study conducted in 1996 found that the training of inner city primary
health care professionals was generally inadequate to deal with the needs
of refugees in their area. 'Warning sounded over refugee role', Doctor,
3 October 1996 cited in The British Medical Association (2001), The
Medical Profession and Human Rights: Handbook for a Changing Agenda,
Zed Books, London, p393.
The British Medical Association, The Medical Profession and Human Rights:
Handbook for a Changing Agenda, p393.
Rule 6, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty.
See Rule 49, United Nations Rules for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived
of their Liberty; Rule 22(3), Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment
of Prisoners.
Ante-natal screening for HIV is now universal; see The Royal College of
Paediatrics and Child Health and the King's Fund (1999), The Health
of Refugee Children: Guidelines for Paediatricians, London.
See UNHCR, Guidelines on Protection and Care, ch4. For an Australian
reference see "The Health of Young Australians" report, endorsed
by the Australian Health Ministers Conference in 1995.
Rule 23, Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners.
Breastfeeding should be promoted as "this method of nutrition provides
complete, hygienic food for the healthy growth and development of infants",
and includes an obligation to "promote the stimulation of lactation
of mothers not able to produce sufficient milk by teaching the mothers
to frequently put the child to the breast." UNHCR Guidelines on Protection
and Care, ch5.
WHO/UNICEF, The Innocenti Declaration on the Protection, Promotion
and Support of Breastfeeding (1990). Full text at http://www.unicef.org/nutrition/index_24807.html