| Literature DB >> 35647290 |
Jonas Debesay1, Line Nortvedt1, Birgitta Langhammer2.
Abstract
Introduction: The Nordic countries have a surprisingly strong relative socioeconomic health inequality. Immigrants seem to be disproportionately affected due to their social economic position in the host countries. Healthcare professionals, including nurses, have a professional obligation to adhere to fairness and social equity in healthcare. The aim of this review was to identify and synthesize research on health status and the impact of social inequalities in older immigrant women in the Nordic countries.Entities:
Keywords: aging; equitable; ethnic minority; female; healthcare
Year: 2022 PMID: 35647290 PMCID: PMC9133866 DOI: 10.1177/23779608221084962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Nurs ISSN: 2377-9608
PICO Model for the Search Strategy.
| Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Women ≥50 years | Not applicable | Income | Not specified |
| Immigrant women | Education | ||
| Health: physical, psychological | Employment | ||
| Nordic countries | Literacy | ||
| Lifestyle |
Search words.
| (female* or woman* or women*) |
| AND |
| MH “Immigrants”) OR (MH “Emigration and
Immigration”) OR (MH “Minority Groups”) OR (MH “Ethnic
Groups”) OR (MH “Cultural Diversity”) OR (MH “Transcultural
Care”) |
| AND |
| (MH “Scandinavia”) OR (MH “Denmark”) OR (MH
“Finland”) OR (MH “Norway”) OR (MH “Sweden”) OR (MH
“Iceland”) |
| AND |
| (MH “Socioeconomic Factors”) OR (MH “Social Class”) OR (MH
“Economic Status”) OR (MH “Illiteracy”) OR (MH “Poverty”) OR
(MH “Literacy”) OR (MH “Educational Status”) OR (MH
“Employment”) OR (MH “Employment Status”) OR (MH
“Unemployment”) OR (MH “Income”) OR (MH “Healthcare
Disparities”) OR (MH “Social Determinants of
Health”) |
| AND |
| (MH “Health”) OR (MH “Health and Disease”) OR (MH “Disease”)
OR (MH “Health Status Disparities”) OR (MH “Health Status”)
OR (MH “Social Determinants of Health”) OR (MH “Mental
Health”) OR (MH “Psychological Well-Being”) |
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram for the search social inequalities and health among older immigrant women.
Description of the Qualitative Papers Included in the Review (n = 4).
| Author | Title | Year | Study design | Data Collection Methods | Target sample | Results Elderly women |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emami, A.; Ekman, S. | Living in a foreign country in old age: life in Sweden as experienced by elderly Iranian immigrants | 1998 | Descriptive qualitative study | In-depth interviews | 123 invited. | >75 years of age: Gratitude for help and support/ welfare
services feel lonely. |
| Emami, A.; Tishelman, C. | Reflections on cancer in the context of women's health: focus group discussions with Iranian immigrant women in Sweden | 2004 | Low-income brackets in Sweden | 9 Focus group interviews | 45 females from 3 age groups; 25–35, 36–45 and 55–70 | Menopause seen as positive. |
| Kessing, L. L.; Norredam, M.; Kvernrod, A. B.; Mygind, A.; Kristiansen, M. | Contextualising migrants’ health behaviour - a qualitative study of transnational ties and their implications for participation in mammography screening | 2013 | Convenient sample qualitative interviews | Semistructured interviews; 8 individual interviews and 6 focus group interviews. | N = 29 women, aged 50–69 years. | Barriers for not attending the screening programme: Inability to read the invitation, lack of transport/emotional or social support, life stressors and competing priorities, as multiple diseases and maintaining relationships with transnational relatives. |
| Kristiansen, M.; Lue-Kessing, L.; Mygind, A.; Razum, O.; Norredam, M. | Migration from low- to high-risk countries: a qualitative study of perceived risk of breast cancer and the influence on participation in mammography screening among migrant women in Denmark | 2014 | Phenomenological study. | 13 semi-structured interviews (8 individual and 6 group interviews) | 29 females |
Description of the Quantitative Papers Included in the Review (n = 10).
| Author | Title | Study aim | Year | Study design | Data Collection Methods | Target sample | Elderly women |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abuelmagd, W,HakonsenH,Mahmood KQ, Taghizadeh N, Toverud E L. | Living with Diabetes: Personal Interviews with Pakistani Women in Norway | To assess how Pakistani women in Norway live with their type 2 diabetes (T2D) and how they respond to lifestyle and medical information. | 2018 | Cohort | A questionnaire used in face-to-face personal interviews descriptive statistics | n = 120 Pakistani women | > 50 years of age (n = 71 poor T2D control among in terms of lifestyle habits, comorbidities, and drug use. Low literacy and cultural factors seem to challenge adherence |
| Diaz E, Kumar B N, Gimeno-Feliu L A, Calderon-Larranaga A, Poblador-Pou B, Prados-Torres A. | Multimorbidity among registered immigrants in Norway: the role of reason for migration and length of stay | To explore the | 2015 | A register-based study: National Population Register and the
Norwegian Health | Comparisons of sociodemographic variables and multimorbidity across the four immigrant groups Persons’ chi-square test and anova as appropriate models of binary logistic regression analyses | A total of 67,398 refugees, 66,942 labour
immigrants, | Multimorbidity was significantly lower among labour and
education immigrants and higher among refugees than family
reunification immigrants. |
| Koochek, A.; Johansson, S. E.; Kocturk, T. O.; Sundquist, J.; Sundquist, K. | Physical activity and body mass index in elderly Iranians in Sweden: a population-based study | To analyze whether elderly Iranians in Sweden have a higher mean body mass index (BMI) and are less physically active than elderly Swedes | 2008 | Cross sectional | Linear regression and unconditional logistic regression | 402 men and women (167 Iranian-born and 235 Swedish-born) aged 60–84 years | Iranian women had significantly higher BMI than the reference group after adjustment for age, education, and marital status. No difference in PA between groups |
| Koocheck A, Montazeri A, Johansson SE, Sundquist J | Health related quality of life and migration: a cross sectional study on elderly Iranians in Sweden | To examine the association between migration status and HRQL in a comparison of elderly Iranians in Iran, elderly Iranian immigrants in Sweden, and elderly Swedes in Sweden | 2007 | Cross sectional | Multiple linear regression | Iranians Iran = 298. Iranians in Sweden = 176, Swedish control group = 151 | The HRQL of elderly Iranians in Sweden was more like that of their countrymen in Iran than that of Swedes, who reported a better HRQL than Iranians Increased time in Sweden – increased HRQoL in elderly Iranian women but not men |
| Kristiansen, M.; Thorsted, B. L.; Krasnik, A.; Von Euler-Chelpin, M. | Participation in mammography screening among migrants and non-migrants in Denmark | To explore: 1) the effects of determinants | 2012 | Cohort from the first eight invitation rounds of the mammography screening programme in Copenhagen, Denmark (1991–2008) | Logistic | Danish-born women n = 84,489, 74% were users of the
organized mammography screening programme. | being 60–64 years |
| Le, M., Hofvind. S., Tsuruda, K., Braaten, T. & Bhargava, S. | Lower attendance rates in BreastScreen Norway among immigrants across all levels of socio-demographic factors: A population-based study. | To identify the extent to which sociodemographic factors
were associated with attendance among | 2019 | Cohort | Poisson regression | 885979 | 53% of immigrants and 76% of non-immigrants attended
mammographic screening after their first
invitation. |
| Lindstrom, M.; Sundquist, J. | Immigration and leisure-time physical inactivity: a population-based study | The association between immigrant status and the | 2001 | A cross-sectional study | Interviewed by means of a
postal | n = (3861–73) 3788 | n = 982 elderly ladies |
| Molsa, M.; Punamaki, R. L.; Saarni, S. I.; Tiilikainen, M.; Kuittinen, S.; Honkasalo, M. L. | Mental and somatic health and pre- and post-migration factors among older Somali refugees in Finland | To investigate mental and somatic health among
older | 2014 | Somali-speaking interviewers | ANOVA | n = 128 Somali | Somali group reported |
| Steiner, K. H.; Johansson, S. E.; Sundquist, J.; Wandell, P. E. | Country of birth-specific and gender differences in prevalence of diabetes in Sweden | To investigate country- or region-specific prevalence of diabetes and gender differences in residents in Sweden based on their country of origin, using Swedish-born men and women as referent | 2013 | Cross sectional | Differences between men and women | 526 Turkish-born immigrants in Sweden were compared with 2,854 Swedish controls, all aged between 27 and 60 years. | Using Swedish women as control, Turkish-born women showed an odds ratio between 2 and 3 for anxiety, sleeping problems and severe pain after adjustment for age, education, marital status, and employment) |
| Taloyan, M | Poor self-rated health in adult patients with type 2 diabetes in the town of Sodertalje: A cross-sectional study | To investigate whether there was an association between ethnicity and poor self-rated health in subjects with type 2 diabetes and to analyze whether the association remained after adjusting for possible confounders | 2010 | A cross-sectional survey based on a patient population in the town of Södertälje. | Unconditional logistic regression was performed to estimate
the odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (95%
CIs). Interviews. questions the same as in the Swedish
Level-of-Living | A total of 354 individuals were included:
Assyrian/Syrian-born (n = 173) and Swedish-born
(n = 181). | Odds ratio for rating poor SRH for Assyrian/Syrian subjects
with type 2 diabetes was 4.5 times higher (95% CI = 2.7–7.5)
than for Swedish patients in a crude model. |
Quality Evaluation of the Quantitative and Qualitative Studies.
|
| ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study ID | Country | Sample size | Age | Qual | Quant non RCT | Quant descriptives |
| Abuelmagd W, Hakonsen H, Mahmood K Q, Taghizade N, Toverud EL. | Norway | 120 | 29–80 | x | ||
| Diaz E, Kumar BN, Gimeno-Feliu LA, Calderon LarranagaA, Poblador-Pou B, Prados-Torres A. | Norway | 67,398 refugees, 66,942 labour immigrants, 101,276 family reunification immigrants and 16,379 education immigrants, | 29–36 | x | ||
| Emami A, Tishelman C | Sweden | 45 | 25–70 | x | ||
| Emami A, Ekman S. | Sweden | 30 | >75 år | x | ||
| Kessing, L L, Norredam M, Kvernrod AB, Mygind A, Kristiansen M. | Denmark | 29 | 50–69 | x | ||
| Koochek, A, Johansson, S. E, Kocturk, T. O, Sundquist, J. Sundquist, K. | Sweden | 402 | 60–84 | x | ||
| Koocheck A, Montazeri A, Johansson SE, Sundquist J | Sweden | 298 + 176 + 151 = 626 | 60–84 | x | ||
| Kristiansen M, Lue-Kessing L, Mygind, A, Razum O, Norredam M. | Denmark | 29 | 50–69 | x | ||
| Kristiansen M, Thorsted BL, Krasnik A, Von Euler-Chelpin M. | Denmark | 84,489 | x | |||
| Le, M., Hofvind S, Tsuruda K, Braaten T, Bhargava S. | Norway | 885,979 | 50–69 | x | ||
| Lindstrom M, Sundquist J | Sweden | 5600 | 18–65 | x | ||
| Molsa, M, Punamaki RL, Saarni SI, Tiilikainen M, Kuittinen S, Honkasalo ML. | Finland | 128 + 128 | 50–80 | x | ||
| Steiner KH, Johansson SE, Sundquist J, Wandell PE. | Sweden | 526 + 2854 (S) | 27–60 | x | ||
| Taloyan M, Wajngot A, Johansson S, Tovi, J, Sundquist J. | Sweden | 354 | 60–69 | x | ||