Smith-Greenaway Emily, Madhavan Sangeetha
Department of Sociology, University of Southern California, USA.
Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado Boulder, USA; MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt), School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; Department of African and African-American Studies, University of Maryland, USA.
Soc Sci Res. 2015 Nov;54:146-58. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.06.005. Epub 2015 Jun 17.
Children of migrant mothers have lower vaccination rates compared to their peers with non-migrant mothers in low-income countries. Explanations for this finding are typically grounded in the disruption and adaptation perspectives of migration. Researchers argue that migration is a disruptive process that interferes with women's economic well-being and social networks, and ultimately their health-seeking behaviors. With time, however, migrant women adapt to their new settings, and their health behaviors improve. Despite prominence in the literature, no research tests the salience of these perspectives to the relationship between maternal migration and child vaccination. We innovatively leverage Demographic and Health Survey data to test the extent to which disruption and adaptation processes underlie the relationship between maternal migration and child vaccination in the context of Benin-a West African country where migration is common and child vaccination rates have declined in recent years. By disaggregating children of migrants according to whether they were born before or after their mother's migration, we confirm that migration does not lower children's vaccination rates in Benin. In fact, children born after migration enjoy a higher likelihood of vaccination, whereas their peers born in the community from which their mother eventually migrates are less likely to be vaccinated. Although we find no support for the disruption perspective of migration, we do find evidence of adaptation: children born after migration have an increased likelihood of vaccination the longer their mother resides in the destination community prior to their birth.
在低收入国家,与母亲非移民的同龄人相比,移民母亲的子女疫苗接种率较低。这一发现的解释通常基于移民的干扰和适应视角。研究人员认为,移民是一个干扰过程,会干扰女性的经济福祉和社会网络,最终影响她们寻求医疗保健的行为。然而,随着时间的推移,移民女性会适应新环境,她们的健康行为也会改善。尽管在文献中很突出,但没有研究检验这些视角对母亲移民与儿童疫苗接种之间关系的显著性。我们创新性地利用人口与健康调查数据,来检验在贝宁(一个西非国家,移民现象普遍且近年来儿童疫苗接种率有所下降)的背景下,干扰和适应过程在多大程度上构成了母亲移民与儿童疫苗接种之间关系的基础。通过根据移民子女是在其母亲移民之前还是之后出生来对其进行分类,我们证实,在贝宁,移民并不会降低儿童的疫苗接种率。事实上,移民后出生的儿童接种疫苗的可能性更高,而其母亲最终移民的社区中出生的同龄人接种疫苗的可能性较小。虽然我们没有找到支持移民干扰视角的证据,但我们确实发现了适应的证据:移民后出生的儿童,其母亲在他们出生前在目的地社区居住的时间越长,他们接种疫苗的可能性就越大。