Literature DB >> 24331876

Immigrant health, place effect and regional disparities in Canada.

Lu Wang1, Wei Hu2.   

Abstract

The paper addresses a critically important area in Canadian immigration and health from both a social and a spatial perspective. It employs multilevel and contextual approaches to examine the social determinants of immigrant health as well as the place effects on self-reported health at a regional and neighborhood scale. The data come from the raw microdata file of the 2005-10 Canadian Community Health Survey (a random national health survey) and the publicly available Canadian Marginalization index based on the 2006 Census. Three populations are compared: Canadian-born, overall foreign-born, and Chinese immigrants. The results suggest various degrees of association between self-reported health, individual and lifestyle behavioral characteristics, and neighborhood material deprivation and ethnic concentration in census tracts. These factors contribute differently to the reported health of Chinese immigrants, Canada's largest recent immigrant group. A healthy immigrant effect is partially evident in the overall foreign-born population, but appears to be relatively weak in Chinese immigrants. For all groups, neighborhood deprivation moderately increases the likelihood of reporting poor health. Ethnic concentration negatively affects self-rated health, with the exception of the slight protective effect of Chinese-specific ethnic density in census tracts. The multilevel models reveal significant area inequalities across Census Metropolitan Areas/Census Agglomerations in risk of reporting unhealthy status, with greater magnitude in the foreign-born population. The vast regional variations in health among Chinese immigrants should be interpreted carefully due to the group's heavy concentration in large cities. The study contributes to the literature on ethnicity and health by systematically incorporating neighborhood contextual effects in modeling the social determinants of immigrant health status. It fills a gap in the literature on neighborhoods and health by focusing on ethnically disparate groups rather than on the general population. By revealing regional disparities in health, the paper adds a spatial perspective to the work on immigrant health.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Canada; Chinese immigrants; Immigrant health; Multilevel model; Regional variation; Self-reported health

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24331876     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.08.040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  9 in total

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Authors:  Elodie Guillaume; Carole Pornet; Olivier Dejardin; Ludivine Launay; Roberto Lillini; Marina Vercelli; Marc Marí-Dell'Olmo; Amanda Fernández Fontelo; Carme Borrell; Ana Isabel Ribeiro; Maria Fatima de Pina; Alexandra Mayer; Cyrille Delpierre; Bernard Rachet; Guy Launoy
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9.  Association between the regional variation in premature mortality and immigration in Ontario, Canada.

Authors:  Laura C Rosella; Kathy Kornas; Tristan Watson; Emmalin Buajitti; Catherine Bornbaum; David Henry; Adalsteinn Brown
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2020-05-27
  9 in total

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