| Literature DB >> 21503816 |
Marcelo Luis Urquia1, John William Frank, Rahim Moineddin, Richard Henry Glazier.
Abstract
Immigrants' health is jointly influenced by their pre- and post-migration exposures, but how these two influences operate with increasing duration of residence has not been well-researched. We aimed to examine how the influence of maternal country of birth and neighborhood deprivation effects, if any, change over time since migration and how neighborhood effects among immigrants compare with those observed in the Canadian-born population. Birth data from Ontario hospital records (2002-2007) were linked with an official Canadian immigration database (1985-2000). The outcome measure was preterm birth. Neighborhoods were ranked according to a neighborhood deprivation index developed for Canadian urban areas and collapsed into tertiles of approximately equal size. Time since immigration was measured from the date of arrival to Canada to the date of delivery, ranging from 1 to 22 years. We used cross-classified random effect models to simultaneously account for the membership of births (N = 83,233) to urban neighborhoods (N = 1,801) and maternal countries of birth (N = 168). There were no differences in preterm birth between neighborhood deprivation tertiles among immigrants with less than 15 years of residence. Among immigrants with 15 years of stay or more, the adjusted absolute risk difference (ARD%, 95% confidence interval) between high-deprived (tertile 3) and low-deprived (tertile 1) neighborhoods was 1.86 (0.68, 2.98), while the ARD% observed among the Canadian-born (N = 314,237) was 1.34 (1.11, 1.57). Time since migration modifies the neighborhood deprivation gradient in preterm birth among immigrants living in Ontario cities. Immigrants reached the level of inequalities in preterm birth observed at the neighborhood level among the Canadian-born after 14 years of stay, but neighborhoods did not influence preterm birth among more recent immigrants, for whom the maternal country of birth was more predictive of preterm birth.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21503816 PMCID: PMC3191215 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-011-9569-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Characteristics of the study population by immigrant status, singleton live births, urban Ontario, 2002–2007
| Immigrants | Canadian-born | |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| Total | 83,233 (100) | 314,237 (100) |
| Country-level characteristics | ||
| Maternal regions of birth | ||
| Industrialized countries | 11,530 (13.8) | |
| East Europe/Central Asia | 6,173 (7.4) | |
| Caribbean | 10,588 (12.7) | |
| Latin America | 4,593 (5.5) | |
| East Asia/Pacific | 15,247 (18.3) | |
| South Asia | 22,518 (27.1) | |
| Middle East/North Africa | 6,174 (7.4) | |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 6,410 (7.7) | |
| Neighborhood-level characteristics | ||
| Material deprivation (tertiles) | ||
| 1 Low deprivation | 24,685 (29.7) | 139,548 (44.4) |
| 2 | 23,673 (28.4) | 91,693 (29.2) |
| 3 High deprivation | 34,875 (41.9) | 82,996 (26.4) |
| Individual-level characteristics | ||
| Preterm birth | 4,986 (6.0) | 19,637 (6.3) |
| Male sex | 42,996 (51.7) | 160,836 (51.2) |
| Maternal age group (years) | ||
| 15–19 | 1,527 (1.8) | 11,535 (3.7) |
| 20–24 | 9,034 (10.9) | 35,894 (11.4) |
| 25–29 | 23,243 (27.9) | 82,385 (26.2) |
| 30–34 | 28,306 (34.0) | 114,832 (36.5) |
| 35–39 | 17,051 (20.5) | 58,218 (18.5) |
| 40 and over | 4,072 (4.9) | 11,373 (3.6) |
| Primiparous women | 30,420 (36.6) | 146,253 (46.5) |
| No high school diplomaa | 52,735 (63.4) | |
| Single/divorced/separateda | 46,658 (56.1) | |
| Immigrant classa | ||
| Economic class | 23,910 (28.7) | |
| Family class | 47,792 (57.4) | |
| Refugees | 11,531 (13.9) | |
| No knowledge of English or Frencha | 36,120 (43.4) | |
| Length of residence | ||
| 1–4 years | 14,555 (17.5) | |
| 5–9 years | 32,539 (39.1) | |
| 10–14 years | 23,827 (28.6) | |
| 15 years and more | 12,312 (14.8) | |
aThese variables were measured at the time of arrival to Canada
Number of births, maternal countries of birth, neighborhoods, and variance components for preterm birth, by immigrant status and immigrants’ duration of residence, singleton live births, urban Ontario, 2002–2007
| Births | Countries | Census- | Country-level | Census-tract level | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| tracts | Variance (SE) | Variance (SE) | |||
| Model 1 Canadian-borna | 314,237 | 1 | 1,801 | 0.023*** (0.004) | |
| Model 2 Immigrants stratified by duration of residenceb | |||||
| <5 years | 14,555 | 148 | 1,472 | 0.125* (0.067) | 0.029 (0.061) |
| 5–9 years | 32,539 | 162 | 1,649 | 0.101** (0.040) | 0.015 (0.019) |
| 10–14 years | 23,827 | 161 | 1,622 | 0.045* (0.023) | 0.009 (0.022) |
| ≥15 years | 12,312 | 133 | 1,523 | 0.008 (0.022) | 0.125** (0.054) |
aTwo-level model adjusted for infant sex, maternal age, and parity
bCross-classified random effects models adjusted for infant sex, maternal age, parity, immigrant class, knowledge of English or French, high school graduation, maternal world region of birth, and marital status
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 (p values for variances are one-sided)
Predicted probabilities and adjusted Absolute Risk Differences in preterm birth (and 95% confidence intervals) between neighborhood deprivation tertiles by immigrant status and immigrants’ duration of residence, singleton live births, urban Ontario, 2002–2007
| Predicted preterm birthc by neighborhood deprivation | Absolute risk differencec | Absolute risk differencec | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Med vs. low deprivation | High vs. low deprivation | ||||
| Low | Med | High | [95% CI] | [95% CI] | |
| Model 1 | |||||
| Canadian-borna | 5.7 | 6.1 | 7.0 | 0.46 [0.26, 0.66] | 1.34 [1.11, 1.57] |
| Model 3 | |||||
| Interaction model for immigrants [duration groupsa deprivation tertiles]b | |||||
| <5 years | 4.5 | 5.0 | 4.7 | 0.50 [−0.44, 1.44] | 0.20 [−0.59, 1.00] |
| 5–9 years | 5.4 | 5.1 | 6.0 | −0.30 [−0.93, 0.34] | 0.58 [−0.03, 1.20] |
| 10–14 years | 6.5 | 6.5 | 6.8 | 0.04 [−0.79, 0.87] | 0.31 [−0.46, 1.08] |
| ≥15 years | 6.3 | 8.0 | 8.1 | 1.72 [0.57, 2.87] | 1.86 [0.68, 2.98] |
aTwo-level model. Adjusted ARDs were calculated for mostly Canadian-born multiparous women aged 30–34 years who gave birth to female infants
bCross-classified model including a product term between duration groups and deprivation tertiles. Adjusted ARDs were calculated for immigrant multiparous women aged 30–34 years who gave birth to female infants, immigrated under the family class, were married or common law, had knowledge of English or French, graduated from high school, and were born in industrialized countries
cPredicted probabilities of preterm birth and absolute risk differences are expressed in percents
FIGURE 1Preterm birth rates among immigrants by years of residence and neighborhood deprivation tertiles and among the Canadian-born (high- and low-deprivation tertiles), urban Ontario, singleton live births 2002–2007.