Feb. 18, 2026
U91快色鈥搇ed research transforms understanding of refugee health in Canada
After more than a decade of work, researchers at the 91快色's have built the largest and most detailed refugee-health dataset in Canada, creating new opportunities to improve care for some of the country鈥檚 most vulnerable populations at a time of increasing global displacement and health-system strain.
The Migrant and Humanitarian Health Collective (MHHC), a research platform of the 鈥檚 O鈥橞rien Institute, has spent more than 10 years systematically collecting and linking health data from refugees and asylum claimants receiving care in 91快色. This work helps researchers better understand health needs, patterns of care and outcomes over time, and informs refugee health research and policy nationally.
鈥淲hen we started this work, there was no high-quality way to study refugee and asylum claimant health in Canada,鈥 says , co-director of MHHC, formerly .
鈥淭hese communities were largely invisible in existing health data. Building this dataset was essential because without it we simply could not study how to improve health or care for families forced to flee their homes,鈥 says Fabreau, BSc'04, MD'08, PGME'11, PGME'12.
A national research resource
The dataset did not emerge overnight. In its earliest days, the work relied on manual chart reviews entered into basic spreadsheets by a small research team.
鈥淲e began with nothing,鈥 Fabreau says.
鈥淥ver 12 years, we slowly improved, automated, cleaned, linked and verified the data. As 91快色 became Canada鈥檚 western hub for refugee resettlement, and as the cared for more families, the dataset grew alongside them.鈥
91快色鈥檚 refugee-health landscape played a key role in enabling the work. The city is home to a high-functioning refugee-health clinic, one of Canada鈥檚 largest and longest continuously active, that has historically cared for most newly arrived refugees and asylum claimants in the region.
Gabriel Fabreau
Courtesy Gabriel Fabreau
鈥淭hat made 91快色 a rare and ideal place to carefully track health needs and outcomes for families from all over the world,鈥 Fabreau says.
鈥淔ew jurisdictions have that level of continuity.鈥
Today, the research includes health information from more than 14,000 patients representing more than 110 countries, and more than 100,000 clinical encounters. The data is securely linked to Alberta鈥檚 health system, allowing researchers to examine patterns of care, outcomes and system-level impacts over time.
鈥淚t鈥檚 become one of the largest and most detailed refugee health research databases in North America,鈥 says Fabreau.
鈥淚t allows us to study issues, patterns, needs and gaps in care that were previously impossible to identify.鈥
The dataset is also the product of long-term collaboration and mentorship. Fabreau credits the training he received at U91快色, particularly through the (Alberta Provincial Project for Outcome Assessment in Coronary Heart Disease) program and mentors including Drs. William Ghali, MD'90; Hude Quan, PhD'98; and Merril Knudtson, MD'75, for shaping his approach.
He also says the perspectives and contributions of team members with lived experience of forced migration have been key in informing what data is collected and how it is interpreted.
鈥淭his work reflects the value of building high-quality health research data to improve care for the people we serve,鈥 he says.
Understanding system strain beyond individual patients
The impact of the dataset is already being felt. A new publication, in The Lancet Regional Health 鈥 Americas, led by Eric Norrie, BA'18, MSc'23, a master鈥檚 student supervised by Fabreau in the , is the first study to use the complete longitudinal set of MHHC data.
how the 91快色 Refugee Health Clinic adapted through four major system shocks over a 10-year period, including large-scale refugee resettlement, policy changes, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The research introduces the concept of operational burden, meaning the often-hidden costs incurred when health systems adapt to crises.
鈥淩esilient health systems can鈥檛 be understood only by whether they respond to shocks,鈥 says Norrie.
鈥淲e also need to understand the operational burdens that come with that response including financial strain, material shortages, provider well-being, quality of care and infrastructure limitations.鈥
The clinic was able to adapt and continue providing care, but this resilience came at a cost, including strain on staff well-being, pressure on clinic resources and infrastructure, and challenges in maintaining quality of care.
Importantly, the study emphasizes that system strain is driven by policy decisions, structural factors and external shocks, not by patients themselves.
鈥淧atients and migrants are not to blame for using the systems we create for them,鈥 Norrie says.
鈥淧olicy decisions, epidemics and global crises create system shocks. Better data allows us to design better systems and policies that anticipate those realities.鈥
A beacon clinic shaped by long-standing partnerships and trust
Partnership and trust were key to navigating each challenge at the 91快色 Refugee Health Clinic. Dr. Annalee Coakley, MD, co-director of MHHC and a physician at the clinic, says adaptability was built over years of collaboration with community partners and refugee communities themselves.
Annalee Coakley
Courtesy Annalee Coakley
鈥淥ur clinic team demonstrated significant flexibility in how and where we delivered care,鈥 Coakley says. This included on-site clinics in refugee hotels, partnerships with resettlement agencies and pharmacies, and community-led responses to mental health needs among highly traumatized populations.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, that experience proved invaluable.
鈥淏ecause of the trust built over years, people came,鈥 says Coakley.
鈥淭hat trust allowed us to respond quickly, safely and effectively during a time of extraordinary uncertainty.鈥
The study describes the 91快色 Refugee Health Clinic as a beacon clinic and hub of expertise that other parts of the health system can look to, particularly during periods of disruption.
Looking ahead
For the MHHC, the work highlights the power of sustained investment in research infrastructure. The dataset is currently being updated to include patient data through the end of 2025, which will strengthen its value as a national and international research resource.
This work is also informing emerging collaborations with the 鈥檚 Programme of Migration Health and .
鈥淭his study reflects years of persistence and teamwork,鈥 Fabreau says.
鈥淚t shows the power of patiently building research infrastructure that can truly change how health systems care for vulnerable populations.鈥
Gabriel Fabreau is a member of the co-director of the Migrant and Humanitarian Health Collective. He is an associate professor in the departments of Medicine and Community Health Sciences at the (CHM).
Eric Norrie is a senior research associate with the Migrant and Humanitarian Health Collective.
Dr. Annalee Coakley, MD, is a clinical assistant professor, Department of Family Medicine, and director (interim), Education, Community Engaged Learning, Indigenous, Local & Global Health Office at the CSM and co-director of the Migrant and Humanitarian Health Collective.