Medical Testing Recommended for
International Adoptees

By Deborah A. Borchers, M.D., F.A.A.P.

Last Revised: 5/17/00

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It is suggested that families make an appointment with their child's health care provider within one to two weeks after your arrival home. This will allow you to have their child examined for any contagious illnesses, evaluated for any conditions that need additional medical referrals (chronic problems), and allow the child's physician to review the child's immunization status.

Some physicians may see a child, in his/her clean, middle-class attire, and tell parents that testing is not necessary. This is not true. Children adopted from other countries may have any and all of these illnesses with absolutely no symptoms, namely no cough for TB, no diarrhea for parasites, no jaundice for hepatitis B, no developmental concerns specific to lead poisoning alone, and no growth failure for thyroid dysfunction. Physicians need to look at these children as if they were with birth parents in native attire in the country of birth. Most physicians would not balk at doing tests for such a child.

A good reference for physicians is a book that should be on the desk of all pediatricians, the Red Book, a publication of the American Academy of Pediatrics. This book, updated every three years, has a chapter which details the testing for all children who have been adopted from other countries, particularly with reference to infectious diseases. Most of the tests listed here are in this book and are recommended by numerous US experts in international adoption medicine.

Recommended blood, urine and screening tests

Your child should have several blood tests after she arrives home

Summary of blood testing recommended by medical adoption experts

Other recommended evaluations

Immunizations

Some children born in other countries will have received immunizations prior to their adoption. Others may receive immunizations at the time of their medical evaluation for their US visa. Generally, the timing falls into one of three categories:

Immunizations given to children while in orphanages should be repeated. According to multiple adoption medicine specialists, blood testing performed on children in similar institutional care in Eastern Europe, China and other countries demonstrated that the children did not have full antibody protection against the diseases for which they had been immunized, despite records that reflected a full set of immunizations. There are strong questions about the proper storage and administration of the vaccines, as well as whether the records are even accurate reflecting that the shots were even given. All live virus vaccines, such as the MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella or German Measles) and Chicken Pox vaccine should be repeated (once the HIV test is shown to be negative). Blood testing should also include testing for the Hepatitis B Antibody (as mentioned earlier), as this will show if a child has antibody to Hepatitis B. Most of the vaccines used these days have such low side effects that it is safe to repeat them, even if a child actually received the vaccines overseas.

Immunizations given to children in foster homes in Korea are thought to be more reliable, and probably do not need to be repeated. When in doubt, it is suggested that these children also have testing done to see if these shots were effective. Again, it is completely safe to repeat most vaccines, with no risk to a child.

Immunizations given to children at the time of the medical evaluation for the visa are considered to be the safest and most reliable of the vaccines. The record needs to be presented to your doctor so that s/he can then time the administration of future vaccines using that information.

Written by Deborah Borchers, M.D.

Written August 25, 1998, revised May 8, 2000.

Dr. Borchers is a general pediatrician and adoption medicine specialist at the Eastgate Pediatric Center in Cincinnati, Ohio (513/753-2820). These tests are in agreement with recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases as well as a consensus of physicians in the US with expertise in international adoption. This article may be reprinted and shared with parents, social workers and physicians.

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