Nauman Elizabeth, VanLandingham Mark, Anglewicz Philip, Patthavanit Umaporn, Punpuing Sureeporn
Department of Global Health Systems and Development, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, 1440 Canal Street, Suite 2200, New Orleans, LA, 70112, USA,
Demography. 2015 Feb;52(1):233-57. doi: 10.1007/s13524-014-0365-y.
We investigate the impacts of rural-to-urban migration on the health of young adult migrants. A key methodological challenge involves the potentially confounding effects of selection on the relationship between migration and health. Our study addresses this challenge in two ways. To control for potential effects of prior health status on post-migration health outcomes, we employ a longitudinal approach. To control for static unobserved characteristics that can affect migration propensity as well as health outcomes, we use fixed-effects analyses. Data were collected in 2005 and 2007 for a cohort of young adults in rural Kanchanaburi province, western Thailand. The migrant sample includes individuals who subsequently moved to urban destinations where they were reinterviewed in 2007. Return migrants were interviewed in rural Kanchanaburi in both years but moved to an urban area and returned in the meantime. A rural comparison group comprises respondents who remained in the origin villages. An urban comparison sample includes longer-term residents of the urban destination communities. Physical and mental health measures are based on the SF-36 health survey. Findings support the "healthy migrant hypothesis." Migrants are physically healthier than their nonmigrant counterparts both before and after moving to the city. We did not find an effect of migration on physical health. Rural-to-urban migrants who stayed at destination experienced a significant improvement in mental health status. Fixed-effects analyses indicate that rural-to-urban migration positively affects mental health. Return migrants do not fare as well as migrants who stayed at destination on both physical and mental health status--evidence of selective return migration.
我们研究了农村向城市迁移对年轻成年移民健康的影响。一个关键的方法学挑战涉及到选择因素对迁移与健康之间关系的潜在混杂影响。我们的研究通过两种方式应对这一挑战。为了控制先前健康状况对迁移后健康结果的潜在影响,我们采用了纵向研究方法。为了控制可能影响迁移倾向以及健康结果的静态不可观察特征,我们使用了固定效应分析。数据于2005年和2007年收集,对象是泰国西部北碧府农村地区的一群年轻人。移民样本包括那些随后迁移到城市目的地并于2007年接受再次访谈的个体。返乡移民在这两年都在北碧府农村接受了访谈,但在此期间他们搬到了城市地区然后又回来了。一个农村对照组由留在原村庄的受访者组成。一个城市比较样本包括城市目的地社区的长期居民。身心健康指标基于SF - 36健康调查。研究结果支持“健康移民假说”。移民在搬到城市之前和之后身体都比非移民同龄人更健康。我们没有发现迁移对身体健康有影响。留在目的地的农村到城市移民心理健康状况有显著改善。固定效应分析表明农村到城市的迁移对心理健康有积极影响。返乡移民在身心健康状况方面不如留在目的地的移民——这是选择性返乡迁移的证据。