Meyer Sarah R, Decker Michele R, Tol Wietse A, Abshir Nada, Mar Aye Aye, Robinson W Courtland
Program on Forced Migration and Health, Department of Population and Family Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2016 May;51(5):713-23. doi: 10.1007/s00127-015-1162-7. Epub 2015 Dec 12.
Migrant workers in low-resource settings may experience multiple types of workplace and security-related stressors. This study explores the relationship between these stressors and adverse mental health outcomes, through a study of migrant workers from Myanmar, working in agriculture, factory, and sex industries in and around Mae Sot, Thailand.
Respondent-driven sampling was used to recruit a total sample of 589 male and female migrants. Trained data collectors administered a survey, which included measures of workplace and security-related stressors, and depression and anxiety symptoms. Multivariate regression models were conducted separately for depression and anxiety symptoms.
For male agricultural workers, security stressors (β = 1.9, p = .001) are associated with an increase in depression symptoms and coercive working conditions are associated with an increase in anxiety symptoms (β = .8, p = .000). For female agricultural workers, daily hassles and stressors were associated with both depression (β = 1.5, p = .000) and anxiety (β = .5, p = .027), and barriers to exit (β = 3.0, p = .005) and security stressors (β = .9, p = .010) were significantly associated with increased depression symptoms. In the factory subsample, sexual assault and abuse (depression: β = 2.7, p = .009; anxiety: β = 2.8, p = .002) and daily hassles and stressors (depression: β = .7, p = .007; anxiety: β = .7, p = .001) were both significantly associated with increased depression and anxiety symptoms for males. Other categories of stressors similarly showed different associations with mental health outcomes between occupational groups, and between male and female migrant workers.
The differing influences of stressors on mental health between the three occupational groups, and between males and females, indicate the need for targeted and tailored approaches to reduce specific stressors and improve services to address mental health needs. Prevention and response need to recognize the differences in working conditions, vulnerabilities, and needs between occupational groups, and between male and female migrant workers.
资源匮乏地区的流动工人可能会经历多种与工作场所和安全相关的压力源。本研究通过对在泰国湄索及其周边地区从事农业、工厂和性产业工作的缅甸流动工人进行研究,探讨这些压力源与不良心理健康结果之间的关系。
采用应答驱动抽样方法招募了总共589名男性和女性流动工人样本。经过培训的数据收集人员进行了一项调查,其中包括与工作场所和安全相关的压力源以及抑郁和焦虑症状的测量。分别针对抑郁和焦虑症状建立了多元回归模型。
对于男性农业工人,安全压力源(β = 1.9,p = 0.001)与抑郁症状增加相关,强制性工作条件与焦虑症状增加相关(β = 0.8,p = 0.000)。对于女性农业工人,日常烦恼和压力源与抑郁(β = 1.5,p = 0.000)和焦虑(β = 0.5,p = 0.027)均相关,离职障碍(β = 3.0,p = 0.005)和安全压力源(β = 0.9,p = 0.010)与抑郁症状增加显著相关。在工厂子样本中,性侵犯和虐待(抑郁:β = 2.7,p = 0.009;焦虑:β = 2.8,p = 0.002)以及日常烦恼和压力源(抑郁:β = 0.7,p = 0.007;焦虑:β = 0.7,p = 0.001)均与男性抑郁和焦虑症状增加显著相关。其他类别的压力源在职业群体之间以及男性和女性流动工人之间同样显示出与心理健康结果的不同关联。
压力源对三个职业群体以及男性和女性心理健康的不同影响表明,需要采取有针对性和量身定制的方法来减少特定压力源并改善服务以满足心理健康需求。预防和应对需要认识到职业群体之间以及男性和女性流动工人在工作条件、脆弱性和需求方面的差异。