Brown University, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 Apr;274:113785. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113785. Epub 2021 Feb 20.
This paper offers theoretical and substantive contributions to migration-health scholarship by employing rich panel data with biomarkers to estimate the effect of migration and urban living on non-communicable disease risk in South Africa. Internal migration and urbanization continue to be pervasive demographic and socio-economic phenomena that structure daily life in low- and middle- income countries (LMICs). Yet, how these processes affect illness and disease in low-resource settings is still not well understood. Five waves (2008-2017) of South Africa's National Income Dynamics Study data and fixed-effects modeling are used to estimate the relationship between urban residence, migration, and health. Results indicate that the migration-health relationship differs by gender: urban living for men is associated with lower blood pressure. While urban residence appears to convey a health advantage when men reside in urban compared with rural places, there is no evidence of an urban health advantage among women. Migration does, however, negatively affect women's health through higher blood pressure (BP). These findings highlight the need for further interrogation of the ways in which processes and health consequences of migration and urban living are structured by gender in LMICs. Given the importance of urbanization and the prevalence of migration in LMICs, the gendered determinants of blood pressure may be key to understanding rising hypertension incidence in contexts like South Africa.
本文通过使用具有生物标志物的丰富面板数据来估计移民和城市生活对南非非传染性疾病风险的影响,为移民与健康研究领域做出了理论和实质贡献。在中低收入国家(LMICs),国内移民和城市化仍然是普遍存在的人口和社会经济现象,影响着人们的日常生活。然而,这些过程如何影响资源匮乏环境下的疾病仍然不太清楚。本文利用南非国家收入动态研究数据的五个波次(2008-2017 年)和固定效应模型来估计城市居住、移民与健康之间的关系。结果表明,移民与健康之间的关系因性别而异:男性的城市居住与较低的血压有关。虽然与农村地区相比,男性居住在城市地区会带来健康优势,但女性居住在城市地区并没有表现出健康优势。然而,移民会通过升高血压(BP)对女性健康产生负面影响。这些发现强调了需要进一步研究移民和城市生活的过程和健康后果如何受到性别因素的影响。考虑到城市化的重要性以及移民在 LMICs 的普遍性,血压的性别决定因素可能是理解南非等国家高血压发病率上升的关键。