| Literature DB >> 17334819 |
Karen Hosper1, Vera Nierkens, Mary Nicolaou, Karien Stronks.
Abstract
Migrant mortality does not conform to a single pattern of convergence towards prevalence rates in the host population. To understand better how migrant mortality develops, it is necessary to further investigate how the underlying behavioural determinants change following migration. We studied whether the prevalence of behavioural risk factors over two generations of Turkish and Moroccan migrants converge towards the prevalence rates in the Dutch population. From a random sample from the population register of Amsterdam, 291 Moroccan and 505 Turkish migrants, aged 15-30, participated in a structured interview that included questions on smoking, alcohol consumption, physical inactivity and weight/height. Data from the Dutch population were available from Statistics Netherlands. By calculating age-adjusted Odds Ratio's, prevalence rates among both generations were compared with prevalence rates in the host population for men and women separately. We found indications of convergence across generations towards the prevalence rates in the host population for smoking in Turkish men, for overweight in Turkish and Moroccan women and for physical inactivity in Turkish women. Alcohol consumption, however, remained low in all subgroups and did not converge towards the higher rates in the host population. In addition, we found a reversed trend among Turkish women regarding smoking: the second generation smoked significantly more, while the first generation did not differ from ethnic Dutch. In general, behavioural risk factors in two generations of non-Western migrants in the Netherlands seem to converge towards the prevalence rates in the Dutch population. However, some subgroups and risk factors showed a different pattern.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17334819 PMCID: PMC2781098 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-007-9104-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082
Characteristics of the study population
| Turks | Moroccans | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men n = 244 | Women n = 261 | Men n = 115 | Women n = 176 | |||||
| First generation n = 93 n (%) | Second generation n = 151 n (%) | First generation n = 129 n (%) | Second generation n = 132 n (%) | First generation n = 38 n (%) | Second generation n = 77 n (%) | First generation n = 73 n (%) | Second generation n = 103 n (%) | |
| 15–19 | 33 (35.5) | 83 (55.0) | 30 (23.3) | 80 (60.6) | 19 (50.0) | 54 (70.1) | 18 (24.7) | 66 (64.1) |
| 20–24 | 20 (21.5) | 43 (28.5) | 21 (16.3) | 32 (24.2) | 10 (26.3) | 17 (22.1) | 15 (20.5) | 24 (23.3) |
| 25–30 | 40 (43.0) | 25 (16.6) | 78 (60.5) | 20 (15.2) | 9 (23.7) | 6 (7.8) | 40 (54.8) | 13 (12.6) |
| Mean age | 23.0 (5.3) | 20.2 (4.0) | 25.0 (5.0) | 19.5 (3.9) | 21.0 (4.6) | 18.8 (3.5) | 24.3 (4.8) | 19.3 (3.8) |
| Marital status | ||||||||
| Married or cohabiting | 42 (45.2) | 30 (19.9) | 78 (60.5) | 28 (21.2) | 6 (15.8) | 7 (9.1) | 34 (46.6) | 22 (22.4) |
| Not married or cohabiting | 51 (54.8) | 121 (80.1) | 51 (39.5) | 104 (78.8) | 32 (84.2) | 70 (90.9) | 39 (53.4) | 81 (78.6) |
| Education | ||||||||
| Low | 36 (40.4) | 54 (37.0) | 72 (57.1) | 50 (39.7) | 12 (34.3) | 25 (33.8) | 29 (43.3) | 36 (36.0) |
| Middle to high | 53 (59.6) | 92 (63.0) | 54 (42.9) | 76 (60.3) | 23 (65.7) | 49 (66.2) | 38 (56.7) | 64 (64.0) |
| Age at migration | ||||||||
| >6th year | 63 (68.5) | – | 91 (71.7) | – | 20 (57.1) | – | 42 (58.3) | – |
| <6th year | 29 (31.5) | – | 36 (28.3) | – | 15 (42.9) | – | 30 (41.7) | – |
| Years of residence | ||||||||
| <12 years | 43 (46.2) | – | 59 (45.7) | – | 20 (55.6) | – | 29 (39.7) | – |
| >12 years | 50 (53.8) | – | 70 (54.3) | – | 16 (44.4) | – | 44 (60.3) | – |
Prevalence of behavioural risk factors among first and second generation Turkish and Moroccan men and women, compared with the prevalence in ethnic Dutch men and women
| Turkish women n = 261 | Moroccan women n = 176 | Dutch womena n = 1,276–1,666 % (95%CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First generation % (95%CI) | Second generation % (95%CI) | First generation % (95%CI) | Second generation % (95%CI) | ||
| Smoking | 35.1 (26.9–43.3) | 44.4 (35.9–52.9) | 2.2 (−1.2–5.6) | 3.2 (−0.2–6.6) | 32.8 (30.6–35.1) |
| Alcohol intake | 18.7 (11.8–25.6) | 21.9 (14.7–29.1) | 5.9 (0.5–11.3) | 3.4 (−0.1–6.5) | 86.3 (84.5–88.1) |
| Insufficiently physically activeb | 66.8 (58.7–74.9) | 58.0 (49.6–66.4) | 74.2 (64.2–84.2) | 76.2 (68.0–84.4) | 53.0 (50.3–55.7) |
| Overweight | 38.9 (29.3–48.5) | 25.9 (16.8–35.1) | 38.9 (26.2–51.6) | 26.5 (16.9–36.1) | 19.0 (17.1–20.9) |
| Turkish men n = 244 | Moroccan men n = 115 | Dutch mena n = 1,199–1,677 % (95%CI) | |||
| First generation % (95%CI) | Second generation % (95%CI) | First generation % (95%CI) | Second generation % (95%CI) | ||
| Smoking | 54.9 (44.4–65.4) | 45.6 (37.1–54.1) | 22.0 (8.7–35.4) | 34.8 (24.0–45.7) | 36.2 (33.9–38.5) |
| Alcohol intake | 35.0 (25.0–45.0) | 38.9 (30.9–46.9) | 19.6 (7.0–32.2) | 23.4 (13.9–32.9) | 92.6 (91.2–94.0) |
| Insufficiently physically activeb | 56.4 (46.3–66.5) | 56.4 (48.5–64.3) | 57.1 (41.4–72.8) | 54.6 (43.5–65.7) | 51.2 (48.4–54.0) |
| Overweight | 34.7 (24.9–44.5) | 43.2 (34.9–51.5) | 9.6 (0.02–19.2) | 22.5 (12.5–32.5) | 21.8 (19.8–23.8) |
All percentages were weighted for age.
a Data for the ethnic Dutch population were available from Statistics Netherlands: POLS-survey 2003/2004.
b Not meeting the guidelines of at least 30 min of moderate physical activity during 5 or more days in a week.
Figure 1Odds ratio’s with 95% confidence intervals for behavioural risk factors among Turkish and Moroccan men and women of first and second generation compared to the reference group, ethnic Dutch men and women.