| Literature DB >> 34715897 |
Ye Na Kim1, Marcelo Urquia2, Sarah Fredsted Villadsen3, Lisa Merry4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Migrants commonly maintain transnational ties as they relocate and settle in a new country. There is a growing body of research examining transnationalism and health. We sought to identify how transnationalism has been defined and operationalized in migrant health research in high income countries and to document which populations and health and well-being outcomes have been studied in relation to this concept.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-border ties; Health; Migration; Operationalization and measurement; Transnationalism; Well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34715897 PMCID: PMC8555176 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-021-00777-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Descriptive summary of studies
| Descriptor | Studies |
|---|---|
| Year of publication | |
| Jan 2004 – Dec 2010 | 7(14.9%) |
| Jan 2011 – Dec 2019 | 37(78.7%) |
| Jan 2020 – Aug 2020 | 3(6.4%) |
| Study design | |
| Cross-sectional survey | 38(80.9%) |
| Longitudinal surveya | 5(10.6%) |
| Mixed methods | 4(8.5%) |
| Location of study (migrant resettlement country)b | |
| North America | |
| United States | 23(48.9%) |
| Canada | 5(10.6%) |
| Unspecified | 1(2.1%) |
| Europe | |
| Netherlands | 10(21.3%) |
| France | 4(8.5%) |
| Ireland | 2(4.3%) |
| Denmark | 1(2.1%) |
| Finland | 1(2.1%) |
| Germany | 2(4.3%) |
| Spain | 1(2.1%) |
| Portugal | 1(2.1%) |
| Italy | 1(2.1%) |
| United Kingdom | 2(4.3%) |
| Unspecified | 1(2.1%) |
| New Zealand | 2(4.3%) |
| Australia | 1(2.1%) |
| Other countries | 2(4.3%) |
| Migrants’ region of originb | |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 12(25.5%) |
| Africa, unspecified | 4(8.5%) |
| Northern Africa / Middle East / Turkey | 7(14.9%) |
| Latin America and ‘Black’ Caribbean | |
| Mexico | 12(25.5%) |
| Central America | 6(12.8%) |
| South America | 4(8.5%) |
| Caribbean (Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic) | 10(21.3%) |
| Latin America, unspecified | 12(25.5%) |
| ‘Black’ Caribbean | 4(8.5%) |
| Caribbean, unspecified | 3(6.4%) |
| Asia | |
| Southeast Asia | 4(8.5%) |
| South Asia | 3(6.4%) |
| East Asia (China, Korea) | 9(19.1%) |
| Unspecified | 4(8.5%) |
| Europe (mostly Eastern Europe) | 9(19.1%) |
| Australia/New Zealand | 1(2.1%) |
| North America | 3(6.4%) |
| Unspecified | 3(6.4%) |
| Sample size (quantitative) | |
| 50–500 | 13(27.7%) |
| 501–1000 | 9(19.1%) |
| 1001–2000 | 15(31.9%) |
| 2001–5000 | 5(10.6%) |
| 5001–10,000 | 3(6.4%) |
| 10,001-20,000 | 1(2.1%) |
| > 20,000 | 1(2.1%) |
| Migrants’ generationb | |
| 1st generation migrants | 47(100%) |
| 2nd generation migrants | 12(25.5%) |
| ≥ 3rd generation migrants | 3(6.4%) |
| Migrants’ statusb | |
| Immigrantsc | 46(97.9%) |
| Refugees and/or Asylum-seekersd | 11(23.4%) |
| Undocumented migrants | 17(36.2%) |
aOne study conducted a cross-sectional analysis
bA study may be counted in more than one category so percentages do not add to 100%
cBroadly defined, including those who immigrated through economic, family and business categories; most studies did not specify the immigrant categories and only described the population as “immigrants”
dIncludes those who had an asylum history but obtained residency status
Definitions and measures of transnationalisma
| 1st author, year (reference #) | Study’s definition of Transnationalism | Administration Method | Languageb, Translationc | No. of items | Response format | Transnationalism dimension assessed | Quality appraisal | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Social | Cultural | Economic | Political | Attitude/Identity | Healthcare | ||||||||
| 1 | Afulani, 2015 [ | Process by which migrants forge and sustain social relations that link their country of origin and destination country, or the maintenance of activities that require regular contact across borders | In-person interview | French (SL) Unspecified mother tongue (O)e | 9 | Y/N (then scored out of 9) | X | X | X | X | C = 0.60 | ||
| Afulani, 2016 [ | |||||||||||||
| 2 | Alcantara, 2015 [ | Frequent and enduring social, economic, political, or cultural ties between two or more countries | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Spa (?)f | 2 | Continuous | X | X | |||||
| Alcantara, 2015 [ | 2 | Y/N & continuous | X | X | |||||||||
| Gelatt, 2013 [ | The process by which immigrants build social fields that link together their country of origin and destination country | Eng (SL) Unspecified mother tongue (?)f | 4 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | X | ||||||
| Torres, 2016 [ | The dual involvement of migrants in social life, religious and cultural practices, healthcare and social service systems, and political activities and entrepreneurial ventures across nation-state boundaries | Eng (SL) Spa (?)f | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | |||||||
| Torres, 2019 [ | Immigrants’ contact with family and friends in their country of origin through long-distance communication, remittance-sending, political participation and return visits | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | |||||||||
| 3 | Ambugo, 2016 [ | Remittances: money sent by migrants to family / friends living abroad or in the same destination country but in separate household | Interview | Eng | 2 | Y/N & continuous | X | ||||||
| 4 | Amoyaw, 2016 [ | Redefining, reproducing, and maintaining ties with relatives and friends in the country of origin; remittances are the oldest and most popular form of transnational behavior | Interview | Eng (SL) Unspecified mother tongue (?)f | 3 | Y/N & continuous (converted to a categorical variable) | X | X | |||||
| Calvasina, 2015 [ | Medical transnationalism: returning to the country of origin for the sole purpose of obtaining healthcare; transnational dental care = seeking dental care across national borders, and can involve opportunistic dental visits while traveling to country of origin | 1 | Y/N | X | |||||||||
| Shooshtari, 2014 [ | Remittances: money sent by immigrants to family members in their country of origin | 2 | Y/N & continuous | X | |||||||||
| 5 | Araujo Dawson, 2010 [ | Not provided | In-person self-completed survey, assistance provided as needed | Eng (SL) Spa (B)f | 21 | Average score computed | X | X | X | X | C = 0.84 | ||
| Murphy, 2004 [ | Maintenance of occupations / activities that necessarily require regular social contact over time across borders and / or cultures | In-person or online self-completed survey | Eng | 6-point Likert scale (0–5) | C = 0.87 | ||||||||
| 6 | Araujo Dawson, 2018 [ | Back and forth migration (i.e. familial, political, economic, and social activities) between destination and country of origin | Telephone survey | Eng (SL) Spa (?) | 10 | Y/N (then scored out of 10) | X | X | X | X | |||
| 7 | Burholt, 2016 [ | Process by which migrants forge and sustain multi-stranded social relations through the creation of cross-border networks | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Punjabi, Gujarati, Hindi, Mandarin, Bengali, Somali, Yoruba, Urdu (B) | 13 | Categorical & continuous (converted into a categorical variable using latent variable modelling) | X | X | |||||
| 8 | Chang, 2018 [ | “Kirogi family”: a transnational living arrangement whereby one parent accompanies their child (ren) to an English-speaking country for educational purposes while the other remains in Korea to support them financially | Online or mailed survey | Eng (SL) Korean (B) | 1 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| 9 | De Jesus, 2013 [ | Transnational healthcare use: seeking health care outside the US to overcome access barriers to healthcare | Telephone survey | Eng (SL) Spa (?) | 2 | Y/N | X | X | |||||
| 10 | Dito, 2017 [ | Transnational parents: those that migrate and leave their child (ren) in the country of origin in the care of another family member, while also participating in raising their children across borders | In-person interview | Eng (?)g or Dut (?)g | 1 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| Haagsman, 2018 [ | Transnational families: when men / women migrate without their nuclear families (i.e. parents migrate while children remain in the country of origin in the care of others) | Eng (?)f,g or Dut (?)g Por (B)f | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | ||||||||
| Haagsman, 2014 [ | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | |||||||||
| Haagsman, 2015 [ | 1 | Y/N | X | ||||||||||
| Mazzucato, 2017 [ | 2 | Y/N | X | X | |||||||||
| White, 2019 [ | Transnational families: families who live apart but retain a sense of collective welfare and identity across national borders | Eng (?)f,g or Dut (?)g | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | |||||||
| 11 | Djundeva, 2020 [ | Migrants actively construct multiple social relations that bring the country of origin and destination country together | Online survey & computer-assisted personal interview | Dut (SL) Polish (?) | 5 | Y/N & continuous | X | X | X | X | |||
| Van den Broek, 2017 [ | Transnational relationships: migrants with a partner living abroad | 2 | Categorical | X | |||||||||
| 12 | Flippen, 2015 [ | Process of exchange, connection, and mobility across national borders | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Spa (?) | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | |||||
| 13 | Gherghina, 2020 [ | Return intentions: the result of integration in the destination country, transnationalism, and the interaction between the two Transnationalism: attachment to the country of origin | Online survey | Not specified | 1 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| 14 | Greder, 2009 [ | Means by which migrants maintain connections with their country of origin while continuing to develop relationships in destination communities | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Spa (T)f | 5 | Y/N (then scored out of 5 and then converted to a categorical variable) | X | X | X | ||||
| 15 | Horn, 2020 [ | A phenomenon where migrants, through daily activities, forge and sustain multi-stranded social, economic, and political relations that link together their societies of origin and settlement | In-person interview or self-report survey | Not specified: Maybe Spa (SL)g | 6 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | X | X | |||
| 16 | Humphries, 2009 [ | Remittances: money sent by migrants to their families in the country of origin | Mailed survey | Eng | 3 | Y/N, continuous & categorical | X | ||||||
| 17 | Jang, 2017 [ | The extent to which migrants maintain links to their homeland; Medical transnationalism: receiving medical care from the country of origin (may not require migrants to actually visit) | Self-report survey | Eng | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | X | |||||
| 18 | Johnson, 2008 [ | Remittances: money / goods sent to relatives in the country of origin | Self-report survey | Eng (SL) Ara (T) | 3 | Continuous & categorical | X | ||||||
| 19 | Kempainnen, 2018 [ | Cross-border healthcare: returning to the country of origin for healthcare | In-person interview | Finnish (SL) Russian (?)f | 1 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| 20 | Klok, 2017 [ | Transnational belonging: sense of belonging directed to own group in the country of origin | In-person interview | Dut (SL) Turkish (O)f Moroccan (O)f Ara/Darijia (O)f Tarafit (O)f | 6 | Categorical (but each item was treated as a score) | X | X | X | cultural identity: C = 0.67; feelings of loss: C = 0.70 | |||
| 21 | McCabe, 2017 [ | Transnational parenting: separation of families, particularly of mothers from children | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Spa (?)f | 1 | Y/N & categorical | X | ||||||
| 22 | Miranda, 2005 [ | Transnational separation: parents (mothers) migrating and leaving their child (ren) behind | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Spa (?)f | 1 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| 23 | Nielsen, 2012 [ | Patient mobility: patients’ deliberate movements across international borders to seek planned healthcare | Computer-assisted telephone interview or online survey | Eng (?)g or Danish (?)g Turkish (B)f | 2 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| 24 | Pannetier, 2017 [ | Cross-border family separation and transnational ties particularly in the form of financial transfers | In-person interview | French (SL) Unspecified mother tongue (O)e | 2 | Y/N & categorical | X | ||||||
| 25 | Razum, 2019 [ | Migrants have resources at their disposition that relate to transnational ties / practices that connect them to their country of origin; transnationalism may vary in degree and vary across social life, familial, economic, sociocultural, or political spheres | Interview | Not specified: Maybe German (SL)g | 7 | Y/N (then scored out of 7 and then converted to a categorical variable) | X | X | X | X | |||
| 26 | Samari, 2016 [ | Social, material, and emotional support migrants exchange with their countries of origin | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Ara (B)f | 21 | Y/N & categorical (Average score then computed for each dimension) | X | X | X | X | cross-border attitudes: C = 0.72; media consumption: C = 0.63; social ties: C = 0.65; community organizations: C = 0.84 | ||
| 27 | Snel, 2006 [ | Transnational migration: pattern of migration in which migrants settle in a new country while maintaining ongoing social connections with their country of origin; people living their lives across international borders | In-person interview | Preferred language of migrants from Morocco, Dutch Antilles, Iraq, former Yugoslavia, Japan, and the United States (?)f,g | 17 + 50 statements on identity | Y/N & categorical (Scores were also calculated) | X | X | X | X | X | sense of belonging to home country: C = 0.81; norms and values of home country: C = 0.86; norms and values of international diaspora: C = 0.84 | |
| 28 | Su, 2012 [ | Cross-border health utilization: physically seeking healthcare across borders | Telephone interview | Eng Spa (?) | 2 | Y/N | X | ||||||
| 29 | Torres, 2013 [ | Participation of activities in or related to migrants’ country of origin, may include a range of dimensions (i.e. economic, political, cultural) | Telephone survey | Eng (SL) Spa (?)f | 5 | Y/N | X | X | |||||
| 30 | Torres, 2018 [ | Migrants maintaining social connections to family / friends both locally and in their countries of origin | In-person interview | Eng (SL) Spa (?) | 1 | Categorical | X | ||||||
| Torres, 2016 [ | Social, political, economic, and cultural spaces formed and reworked by migrants in the destination and country of origin, and the flow of capital, goods, ideas, and individuals within these spaces | 2 | Categorical | X | |||||||||
| 31 | Vaquera, 2011 [ | The development of networks, activities, and patterns of living that span origin and destination countries | Telephone survey | Eng (SL) Spa (T) Haitian Creole (T) | 8 | Categorical | X | X | X | X | |||
| 32 | Wang, 2015 [ | Medical transnationalism: migrants’ efforts to maintain and make use of transnational ties with the country of origin in managing their health and well-being | Interview | Eng (SL) Korean (T)f | 8 | Y/N | X | X | X | ||||
aStudies that used the same measure (or parts of the same measure) are grouped together; 32 measures were used across all of the studies
bEng English, Ara Arabic, Spa Spanish, Dut Dutch, Por Portuguese
cSL source language (i.e., the original language of the measure), T simple direct translation, B Translation & back-translation, O Oral translation,? = translation process unclear
dChronbach’s alpha
eProfessional interpreter
fBilingual/bicultural interviewer
gUnclear source language
Health and well-being outcomes studied
| Outcomes studied | na | %a | Studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mental health | 23 | 48.9% | |
| Major depressive episodes or symptoms | 9 | 19.1% | [ |
| Poor emotional well-being | 5 | 10.6% | [ |
| Loneliness | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Acculturative stress | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Anxiety | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Psychological distress | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Happiness | 4 | 8.5% | [ |
| Sadness | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Poor mental health | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Immigration related stress | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Marital stress | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Employment stress | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| General stress | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Emotional financial strain | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Partner violence | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Health & well-being | 18 | 38.3% | |
| Poor self-rated health | 6 | 12.8% | [ |
| Life satisfaction | 7 | 14.9% | [ |
| Poor subjective well-being | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Dental problems | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Chronic disease & health limitations | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Health satisfaction | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Inflammatory markers | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| General health problems | 5 | 8.5% | [ |
| Socioeconomic indicators | 14 | 29.8% | |
| Financial strain | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Housing | 3 | 4.3% | [ |
| Low income | 4 | 6.4% | [ |
| High income | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Financial struggles | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Socioeconomic position | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Satisfaction with host country economy | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Knowledge, positive perception and/or use of community/social resources | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Lack of health/dental insurance | 6 | 8.5% | [ |
| Poor quality healthcare in host country | 3 | 2.1% | [ |
| Has a usual care provider | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Social contacts & relationships | 9 | 19.1% | |
| Quality of parent-child relationships (in host country) | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Quality of parent-child relationships (children abroad) | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Social support | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Social networks | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Relationships with locals | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Transnational relationships | 3 | 2.1% | [ |
| Health Behaviours | 4 | 8.5% | |
| Alcohol use | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Smoking | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Substance abuse | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Fertility ideals, current/cumulative fertility | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Integration | 11 | 23.4% | |
| Perceived discrimination | 6 | 12.8% | [ |
| Citizenship in host country | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Integrated in host country | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Knowledge of host country’s language | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Sense of belonging in host country | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Host country identity | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Happy with decision to have moved to host country | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Use of country of origin as reference group to evaluate social standing | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Intention to leave host country | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Home country identity | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| ‘Ethnic group’ identity | 2 | 4.3% | [ |
| Employment related outcomes | 2 | 4.3% | |
| Job absenteeism | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Job instability | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Work-family life conflict | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
| Unemployment | 1 | 2.1% | [ |
aNumbers sum up to greater than 47 and 100% since a number of studies examined more than one outcome