Subedi Rajendra Prasad, Rosenberg Mark Warren
Queen's University, Department of Geography, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Queen's University, Department of Geography, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Aug;115:103-10. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.06.021. Epub 2014 Jun 13.
Studies have shown that immigrants are normally in better health on arrival compared to their Canadian-born counterparts. However, the health conditions of new immigrants deteriorate after a few years of their arrival in Canada. This phenomenon is popularly termed the "healthy immigrant effect" (HIE) in the immigrant health literature. Although different hypotheses have been proposed to understand HIE, the causes are subject to ongoing discussion. Unlike previous studies, this study explored the possible causes behind the variations in the health status of recent and more established immigrants comparing 2001 and 2010 Canadian Community Health Surveys (CCHS). Four different hypotheses - namely lifestyle change, barriers to health care services, poor social determinants of health, and work related stress - were tested to understand variations in health status. The study concludes that there is a statistically significant difference in the socioeconomic characteristics and health outcomes of immigrants having less than and more than 10 years of residency in Canada. Logistic regression models show that the health conditions of immigrants are associated with age, sex, ethnic origin, smoking habit, Body Mass Index (BMI), total household income, number of consultations made with a family doctor per year and work related stress.
研究表明,与在加拿大出生的同龄人相比,移民抵达时的健康状况通常更好。然而,新移民抵达加拿大几年后的健康状况会恶化。在移民健康文献中,这种现象通常被称为“健康移民效应”(HIE)。尽管为理解健康移民效应提出了不同的假设,但其成因仍在讨论之中。与以往研究不同,本研究通过比较2001年和2010年加拿大社区健康调查(CCHS),探究了近期移民和定居时间更长的移民健康状况差异背后的可能原因。为了解健康状况差异,对四个不同的假设——即生活方式改变、医疗服务障碍、健康的社会决定因素差以及工作相关压力——进行了检验。研究得出结论,在加拿大居住时间少于10年和超过10年的移民,其社会经济特征和健康结果存在统计学上的显著差异。逻辑回归模型显示,移民的健康状况与年龄、性别、种族、吸烟习惯、体重指数(BMI)、家庭总收入、每年与家庭医生的会诊次数以及工作相关压力有关。