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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > Policy Without Data: The Migrant Health Paradox

Policy Without Data: The Migrant Health Paradox

GMJ
Last updated: 13/07/2026 15:06
By
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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Infographic showing the gap between migration health policies and data collection systems globally
WHO's first global scorecard reveals that while 60+ countries now include migrants in health policies, only 37% collect migration-related health data. Without measurement systems, health policies for over a billion migrants remain unverifiable promises. — Births attended by a skilled health personnel UNHDR 2007-2008.PNG by Sbw01f / CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
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1 min read|144 words

The World Health Organization’s first global scorecard on migrant health, released in March 2026, exposes a striking disconnect in how the world approaches health for over one billion migrants and refugees. While two-thirds of surveyed countries have now written migrants into their national health policies, implementation remains the critical challenge. The real problem is visibility: only 37% of countries routinely collect migration-related health data, meaning most health systems operate without baseline information on the populations they theoretically serve. This gap between policy and measurement creates a dangerous blind spot. Without disaggregated data, migrants become invisible in the statistics that determine budget allocation, outbreak response priorities, and resource distribution. As the report demonstrates, you cannot effectively manage—or protect—what you cannot count. The WHO’s scorecard provides the first comprehensive baseline, but translating policy into measurable health outcomes remains the defining challenge for global health systems in 2026.

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ByProf. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD, is Editor-in-Chief of the Georgian Medical Journal and Chair of the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). He is Professor and Head of the Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences at David Tvildiani Medical University, and Secretary/Treasurer of the UEMS Section of Public Health. ORCID: 0000-0001-7609-4515.

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