Cederström Agneta, Dunlavy Andrea
Department of Public Health Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
Centre for Health Equity Studies (CHESS), Stockholm University/Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
SSM Popul Health. 2025 Mar 27;30:101793. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2025.101793. eCollection 2025 Jun.
In recent decades, Sweden has become an increasingly diverse society by origin, but one in which residential segregation by migrant background has also increased. This study examines how different aspects of migrant residential segregation are associated with all-cause mortality among native-born and migrant populations.
Using Swedish population-based registers, this longitudinal open cohort study assessed associations between four local level indices of migrant residential segregation and all-cause mortality among adult migrant and native-born residents of Sweden's three largest metropolitan areas (Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö) between 2004 and 2016. Multilevel Poisson regression models, adjusted for individual-level sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors as well as area-level socioeconomic conditions, were used to estimate associations between these indices and all-cause mortality.
Moderate decreased mortality risks were observed among migrants in residential areas with higher levels of migrant density, isolation, and exposure in fully adjusted models. However, isolation and exposure effects could not be distinguished due to a high degree of correlation between the isolation and exposure measures. In fully adjusted models mortality gradients were largely unobserved among native-born individuals in relation to migrant residential segregation. The evenness dimension of segregation showed limited relevance for mortality risk in both groups.
This study provides evidence that higher migrant density is associated with lower mortality risks among migrants, suggesting that residential areas with higher proportions of migrants may offer health benefits for migrants. These findings highlight the importance of residential contexts in shaping migrant health outcomes.
近几十年来,瑞典在人口来源方面已成为一个日益多元化的社会,但与此同时,按移民背景划分的居住隔离现象也有所增加。本研究探讨了移民居住隔离的不同方面与本土出生人口和移民人口的全因死亡率之间的关联。
利用瑞典基于人群的登记数据,这项纵向开放队列研究评估了2004年至2016年间瑞典三大都市地区(斯德哥尔摩、哥德堡和马尔默)成年移民和本土出生居民中,四个地方层面的移民居住隔离指数与全因死亡率之间的关联。采用多水平泊松回归模型,对个体层面的社会人口学和社会经济因素以及地区层面的社会经济状况进行了调整,以估计这些指数与全因死亡率之间的关联。
在完全调整模型中,在移民密度、隔离程度和接触程度较高的居住区的移民中,观察到死亡率风险适度降低。然而,由于隔离措施和接触措施之间的高度相关性,无法区分隔离效应和接触效应。在完全调整模型中,本土出生个体的死亡率梯度与移民居住隔离之间在很大程度上未被观察到。隔离的均匀性维度对两组的死亡风险相关性有限。
本研究提供的证据表明,较高的移民密度与移民较低的死亡风险相关,这表明移民比例较高的居住区可能对移民健康有益。这些发现凸显了居住环境在塑造移民健康结果方面的重要性。