Moullan Yasser, Jusot Florence
1 University of Oxford (International Migration Institute), Oxford, UK2 Institut de Recherche et de Documentation en Economie de la Santé (IRDES), Paris, France
2 Institut de Recherche et de Documentation en Economie de la Santé (IRDES), Paris, France3 Université Paris-Dauphine, Leda-legos, Paris, France.
Eur J Public Health. 2014 Aug;24 Suppl 1:80-6. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/cku112.
Even if health status of immigrants constitutes an important public health issue, the literature provides contradictory results on the existence of a 'healthy migrant' effect in Europe. This study proposes to explore the heterogeneity of the health gap between migrants and natives across four European countries.
Based on several harmonized national health interview surveys, the association between migratory status and self-assessed health was firstly explored separately in Belgium, France, Spain and Italy. To explore whether differences in health gap between countries reflect differences in health status of immigrants between host countries or whether they are because of differences in health status of natives between host countries, the association between the host country and health was secondly analysed separately among a pooled sample of immigrants and one of natives, controlling for socio-economic status and country of origin.
After controlling for socio-economic status, immigrants report a poorer health status than natives in France, Belgium and Spain, whereas they report a better health status than natives in Italy, among both women and men. A North-South gradient in immigrants' health status appears: their health status is better in Italy and in Spain than in France and Belgium. Conversely, health status of natives is poorer in Italy and in Belgium than in France and in Spain.
Differences in health gap reflect differences in health status of both natives and immigrants between host countries. This suggests differences in health selection at migration and in immigrants' integration between European countries.
尽管移民的健康状况是一个重要的公共卫生问题,但文献对于欧洲是否存在“健康移民”效应给出了相互矛盾的结果。本研究旨在探究四个欧洲国家中移民与本国居民之间健康差距的异质性。
基于多项协调一致的全国健康访谈调查,首先在比利时、法国、西班牙和意大利分别探讨移民身份与自我评估健康之间的关联。为探究各国之间健康差距的差异是反映了东道国移民健康状况的差异,还是由于东道国本国居民健康状况的差异,其次在合并的移民样本和本国居民样本中分别分析东道国与健康之间的关联,并对社会经济地位和原籍国进行控制。
在控制了社会经济地位之后,法国、比利时和西班牙的移民报告的健康状况比本国居民差,而在意大利,无论男女,移民报告的健康状况都比本国居民好。移民的健康状况呈现出南北梯度:他们在意大利和西班牙的健康状况优于在法国和比利时。相反,本国居民在意大利和比利时的健康状况比在法国和西班牙差。
健康差距的差异反映了东道国本国居民和移民健康状况的差异。这表明欧洲国家之间在移民时的健康选择以及移民融入方面存在差异。