Senthanar Sonja, Koehoorn Mieke, McLeod Christopher B
School of Population and Public Health, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Partnership for Work, Health and Safety, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Apr 29;20(4):e0321927. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0321927. eCollection 2025.
Immigrant workers are overly represented in high risk and precarious jobs that are not commensurate with their background, skills and experience. Some evidence exists to suggest that access to employment-related (ER) supports and services in the community can help leverage job opportunities. This study examined the association between use of government-funded ER services and paid employment of immigrants to Canada. ER service records were linked with immigration and taxation records for individuals who immigrated to Canada between 2015-2017. The cohort was restricted to immigrants with no paid employment in their year of landing to examine the direct impact of ER service (measured as any ER service, intensity of service and type of ER service) on subsequent employment. The outcome of subsequent employment in the year following ER service provision was estimated using adjusted logistic regression models. Immigrants displayed a higher odds of paid employment the year following the ER service for individuals that accessed any ER service (OR = 1.57; 95% CI, 1.49 to 1.65), across the measures of ER intensity (ranging from OR = 1.26; 95%CI, 1.09 to 1.45 at the lowest intensity percentile to OR = 2.21; 95% CI, 1.95 to 2.52 at the highest intensity percentile), and by type of ER service (essential skills and aptitude training, OR = 1.35; 95% CI, 0.93 to 1.96; short-term intervention, OR = 1.57; 95% CI, 1.49 to 1.66; long-term intervention, OR = 1.45; 95% CI, 1.07 to 1.95) compared to immigrants who did not access ER services. This study finds that access to an ER service is associated with paid employment. It highlights key services that should be promoted to facilitate employment integration but also potential barriers to integration that warrant further investigations.
移民工人在与其背景、技能和经验不相称的高风险和不稳定工作中所占比例过高。有证据表明,获得社区中与就业相关(ER)的支持和服务有助于创造就业机会。本研究调查了加拿大政府资助的ER服务的使用与移民就业之间的关联。ER服务记录与2015年至2017年期间移民到加拿大的个人的移民和税收记录相关联。该队列仅限于登陆当年无有偿工作的移民,以研究ER服务(以任何ER服务、服务强度和ER服务类型衡量)对后续就业的直接影响。使用调整后的逻辑回归模型估计ER服务提供后一年的后续就业结果。与未使用ER服务的移民相比,使用任何ER服务的个人在使用ER服务后的一年中有有偿工作的几率更高(OR = 1.57;95% CI,1.49至1.65),在ER强度的各项衡量指标中(从最低强度百分位数的OR = 1.26;95% CI,1.09至1.45到最高强度百分位数的OR = 2.21;95% CI,1.95至2.52),以及按ER服务类型(基本技能和能力培训,OR = 1.35;95% CI,0.93至1.96;短期干预,OR = 1.57;95% CI,1.49至1.66;长期干预,OR = 1.45;95% CI,1.07至1.95)来看都是如此。本研究发现,获得ER服务与有偿就业相关。它突出了应推广以促进就业融入的关键服务,但也指出了需要进一步调查的潜在融入障碍。