Jang Su Yeon, Oksuzyan Anna, Myrskylä Mikko, van Lenthe Frank J, Loi Silvia
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany.
Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
SSM Popul Health. 2023 Jul 29;23:101478. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2023.101478. eCollection 2023 Sep.
The probability of having multiple chronic conditions simultaneously, or multimorbidity, tends to increase with age. Immigrants face a particularly high risk of unhealthy ageing. This study investigates the immigrant-native disparities in the speed of age-related chronic disease accumulation, focusing on the number of chronic health conditions; and considers the heterogeneity of this trajectory within immigrant populations by origin and receiving country. We use data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe from 2004 to 2020 on adults aged 50 to 79 from 28 European countries and employ both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses. For longitudinal panel analyses, we use fixed-effects regression models to account for the unobserved heterogeneity related to individual characteristics including migration background. Our results indicate that immigrants report a higher number of chronic conditions at all ages relative to their native-born peers, but also that the immigrant-native differential in the number of chronic conditions decreases from age 65 onwards. When considering differences by origin country, we find that the speed of chronic disease accumulation is slower among immigrants from the Americas and the Asia and Oceania country groups than it is among natives. When looking at differences by receiving country group, we observe that the speed of accumulating chronic diseases is slower among immigrants in Eastern Europe than among natives, particularly at older ages. Our findings suggest that age-related trajectories of health vary substantially among immigrant populations by origin and destination country, which underscore that individual migration histories play a persistent role in shaping the health of ageing immigrant populations throughout the life course.
同时患有多种慢性病,即共病的概率往往会随着年龄的增长而增加。移民面临着不健康老龄化的特别高风险。本研究调查了移民与本地居民在与年龄相关的慢性病积累速度方面的差异,重点关注慢性健康状况的数量;并考虑了移民群体内部按原籍国和接收国划分的这种轨迹的异质性。我们使用了2004年至2020年欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查的数据,这些数据来自28个欧洲国家50至79岁的成年人,并采用了横断面分析和纵向分析。对于纵向面板分析,我们使用固定效应回归模型来解释与包括移民背景在内的个人特征相关的未观察到的异质性。我们的结果表明,与本地出生的同龄人相比,移民在所有年龄段报告的慢性病数量都更多,但65岁以后,移民与本地居民在慢性病数量上的差异会减小。在考虑原籍国差异时,我们发现来自美洲以及亚洲和大洋洲国家组的移民中慢性病积累的速度比本地居民慢。在查看接收国组的差异时,我们观察到东欧移民中慢性病积累的速度比本地居民慢,尤其是在老年时。我们的研究结果表明,按原籍国和目的地国划分不同移民群体中与年龄相关的健康轨迹差异很大,这突出表明个人移民历史在塑造老年移民群体一生中健康状况方面持续发挥作用。