Lubbers Marcel, Gijsberts Mérove
Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI/KNAW), The Hague, Netherlands.
Department of Sociology, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Front Sociol. 2019 Jun 6;4:45. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2019.00045. eCollection 2019.
Immigrants are often found to rate their health better than the native population does. It is, however, suggested that this healthy immigrant effect declines with an enduring length of stay. With Dutch panel data, we investigate which patterns in self-rated health can be found among immigrants shortly after their migration. We test to what extent economic, social, cultural and emotional explanations affect the changes that immigrants report in self-rated health. Based on a four-wave panel, our results support the immigrants' health decline hypothesis, since the self-rated health decreases in the first years after immigration to the Netherlands. The major change occurs between immigrants rating their health no longer as "very good," but as "good." Shortly after immigration, self-rated health is associated with being employed and a higher income. Hazardous work and physically heavy work decrease self-rated health. Notwithstanding these effects, social, cultural, and emotional explanations turn out to be stronger. A lack of Dutch friends, perceptions of discrimination, perceived cultural distance, and feelings of homesickness strongly affect self-rated health. Furthermore, in understanding changes in self-rated health, the effects of making contact with Dutch people and changes in the perception of discrimination are definitive. However, contact with Dutch people did not decrease and discrimination did not increase over time, making them ineligible as an explanation for overall health decrease. Only the small effect that first-borns have may count as a reason for decreased self-rated health, since many of the recent immigrants we followed started families in the first years after immigration. Our findings leave room for the coined "acculturation to an unhealthier lifestyle thesis," and we see promise in a stronger focus on the role of unmet expectations in the first years after immigration.
人们经常发现,移民对自身健康状况的评价比本国人口更高。然而,有观点认为,这种健康移民效应会随着居留时间的延长而减弱。利用荷兰的面板数据,我们调查了移民在刚移民后不久自我报告的健康状况中存在哪些模式。我们测试了经济、社会、文化和情感方面的解释在多大程度上影响移民报告的自我健康评价变化。基于一个四波面板数据,我们的结果支持了移民健康下降假说,因为移民到荷兰后的头几年自我健康评价下降了。主要变化发生在移民不再将自己的健康评为“非常好”,而是“好”的时候。移民后不久,自我健康评价与就业和较高收入相关。危险工作和体力繁重的工作会降低自我健康评价。尽管有这些影响,但社会、文化和情感方面的解释结果显示更为有力。没有荷兰朋友、对歧视的认知、感知到的文化距离以及思乡之情都会强烈影响自我健康评价。此外,在理解自我健康评价的变化时,与荷兰人接触的影响以及对歧视认知的变化是决定性的。然而,随着时间的推移,与荷兰人接触并没有减少,歧视也没有增加,这使得它们无法作为整体健康下降的解释。只有头胎出生的人产生的微小影响可能被视为自我健康评价下降的一个原因,因为我们跟踪的许多新移民在移民后的头几年就组建了家庭。我们的研究结果为“适应更不健康的生活方式理论”留下了空间,并且我们认为更加强调移民后头几年未满足期望的作用是有前景的。