Environment, Climate Change and Health Department, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
Australian Centre for Public and Population Health Research, Faculty of Health, University of Technology, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
PLoS One. 2021 Jun 9;16(6):e0252651. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252651. eCollection 2021.
The review aimed to synthesise recent evidence on health service use and health outcomes among international migrant workers, compared with non-migrant workers.
A search was carried out in MEDLINE, PubMed, Embase, and CINAHL for studies published between Jan 1, 2010, and Feb 29, 2020. Included outcomes were: occupational health service use, fatal occupational injury, HIV, and depression. Two authors independently screened records, extracted data, assessed risk of bias and judged quality of evidence. We meta-analysed estimates and conducted subgroup analyses by sex, geographical origin, geographical destination, and regularity of migration.
Twenty-one studies were included comprising >17 million participants in 16 countries. Most studies investigated regular migrant workers in high-income destination countries. Compared with non-migrant workers, migrant workers were less likely to use health services (relative risk 0·55, 95% confidence interval 0·41 to 0·73, 4 studies, 3,804,131 participants, I2 100%, low quality of evidence). They more commonly had occupational injuries (1·27, 95% confidence interval 1·11 to 1·45, 7 studies, 17,100,626 participants, I2 96%, low quality of evidence). Relative risks differed by geographical origin and/or destination. There is uncertainty (very low quality of evidence) about occupational health service use (0 studies), fatal occupational injuries (5 studies, N = 14,210,820), HIV (3 studies, N = 13,775), and depression (2 studies, N = 7,512).
Migrant workers may be less likely than non-migrant workers to use health services and more likely to have occupational injuries. More research is required on migrant workers from and in low- and middle-income countries, across migration stages, migrating irregularly, and in the informal economy.
本综述旨在综合近期有关国际移民工人与非移民工人相比的卫生服务利用和健康结果的证据。
在 MEDLINE、PubMed、Embase 和 CINAHL 中检索了 2010 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 2 月 29 日期间发表的研究。纳入的结果包括:职业健康服务利用、致命职业伤害、艾滋病毒和抑郁。两位作者独立筛选记录、提取数据、评估偏倚风险和判断证据质量。我们对估计值进行了荟萃分析,并按性别、原籍国、目的地国和移民的规律性进行了亚组分析。
纳入了 21 项研究,共涉及 16 个国家的 1700 多万参与者。大多数研究调查了高收入目的地国家的正规移民工人。与非移民工人相比,移民工人使用卫生服务的可能性较小(相对风险 0.55,95%置信区间 0.41 至 0.73,4 项研究,3804131 名参与者,I2 100%,低质量证据)。他们更常见职业伤害(1.27,95%置信区间 1.11 至 1.45,7 项研究,17100626 名参与者,I2 96%,低质量证据)。相对风险因原籍国和/或目的地国而异。关于职业健康服务的使用(0 项研究)、致命职业伤害(5 项研究,N = 14210820)、艾滋病毒(3 项研究,N = 13775)和抑郁(2 项研究,N = 7512),证据质量不确定(极低质量证据)。
移民工人使用卫生服务的可能性可能低于非移民工人,而职业伤害的可能性可能更高。需要对来自低中收入国家和不同移民阶段、不规则移民以及非正规经济中的移民工人进行更多研究。