| Literature DB >> 35040957 |
Andrea Dunlavy1, Agneta Cederström1, Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi1,2, Mikael Rostila1, Sol P Juárez1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies of migration and health have hypothesized that immigrants may emigrate when they develop poor health (salmon bias effect), which may partially explain the mortality advantage observed among immigrants in high-income countries. We evaluated the salmon bias effect by comparing the health of immigrants in Sweden who emigrated with those who remained, while also exploring potential variation by macro-economic conditions, duration of residence and region of origin.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35040957 PMCID: PMC8975526 DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckab222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Public Health ISSN: 1101-1262 Impact factor: 4.424
Descriptive characteristics of the study population
|
| Person-time/ 1000 py | Recorded emigrations | Unrecorded emigrations | Total emigrations | Total emigration rates/1000 py | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||||
| Men | 896 232 (50.8) | 9960.5 | 210 165 | 11 591 | 221 756 | 22.3 |
| Women | 869 227 (49.2) | 10 692.6 | 168 918 | 6168 | 175 086 | 16.4 |
| Region of origin | ||||||
| Finland | 166 286 (9.4) | 2855.6 | 39 255 | 566 | 39 821 | 13.9 |
| Other Nordic countries | 138 243 (7.8) | 1386.2 | 64 526 | 2044 | 66 570 | 48.0 |
| Other EU28 countries | 169 856 (9.6) | 1642.1 | 58 917 | 2626 | 61 543 | 37.5 |
| Eastern Europe and Russia | 347 270 (19.7) | 4876.8 | 44 729 | 3655 | 48 384 | 9.9 |
| North America and Oceania | 61 072 (3.5) | 566.4 | 26 501 | 762 | 27 263 | 48.1 |
| Middle East | 377 689 (21.4) | 4286.2 | 42 070 | 2672 | 44 742 | 10.4 |
| Asia | 254 750 (14.4) | 2352.1 | 57 838 | 2921 | 60 759 | 25.8 |
| Horn of Africa | 93 281 (5.3) | 808.0 | 12 216 | 938 | 13 154 | 16.3 |
| Rest of Africa | 78 300 (4.4) | 775.2 | 16 119 | 875 | 16 994 | 21.9 |
| South America | 78 712 (4.5) | 1104.5 | 16 912 | 700 | 17 612 | 15.9 |
| Age | ||||||
| 18–25 | 2176.3 | 48 326 | 3064 | 51 390 | 23.6 | |
| 26–35 | 4761.5 | 149 279 | 5923 | 155 202 | 32.6 | |
| 36–45 | 4864.6 | 96 321 | 3635 | 99 956 | 20.5 | |
| 46–55 | 3998.9 | 44 354 | 2791 | 47 145 | 11.8 | |
| 56–65 | 2610.5 | 21 708 | 1263 | 22 971 | 8.8 | |
| 66–75 | 1426.0 | 12 775 | 720 | 13 495 | 9.5 | |
| 76+ | 815.3 | 6355 | 363 | 6718 | 8.2 | |
| Period | ||||||
| 1992–96 | 2925.4 | 55 216 | 709 | 55 925 | 19.1 | |
| 1997–2002 | 4140.9 | 68 739 | 1628 | 70 367 | 17.0 | |
| 2003–07 | 4093.4 | 76 329 | 3453 | 79 782 | 19.5 | |
| 2008–11 | 3888.1 | 71 724 | 7278 | 79 002 | 20.3 | |
| 2012–16 | 5605.3 | 107 110 | 4691 | 111 801 | 19.9 | |
| Duration of residence | ||||||
| 0–5 years | 5541.1 | 232 801 | 12 053 | 244 854 | 44.2 | |
| 6–10 years | 2877.4 | 56 830 | 2072 | 58 902 | 20.5 | |
| 11–15 years | 2529.3 | 31 346 | 1209 | 32 555 | 12.9 | |
| 16–20 years | 2486.2 | 22 907 | 963 | 23 870 | 9.6 | |
| 20+ years | 7219.0 | 35 234 | 1462 | 36 696 | 5.1 |
py, person-years.
Figure 1Incidence RRs with 95% CIs for emigration among immigrants to Sweden by CCI score. Adjusted for sex, age, macroeconomic period factors, duration of residence and region of origin
Figure 2Incidence RRs with 95% CIs for emigration by CCI scores and region of origin. Adjusted for sex, age, macroeconomic period factors and duration of residence