Integration policies and immigrants’ mortality: an explorative European study
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Transcript of Integration policies and immigrants’ mortality: an explorative European study
Integration policies and immigrants’ mortality: an explorative European study
Umar Ikram1, Davide Malmusi2, Knud Juel3, Gregoire Rey4, Anton Kunst1
1Department of Public Health, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam; 2Agència de Salut Pública de Barcelona; 3National Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, Copenhagen; 4INSERM, CépiDc, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France
This work was supported by European Commission DG SANCO (grant number 2005122) and 7th Framework Programme (SOPHIE project, grant number 278173) Correspondence: Umar Ikram, [email protected]
Methods • Mortality and population data from the Migrant Ethnic Health
Observatory project (Netherlands 1996-2006 open cohort; France 2005-07 unlinked mortality register and census data; Denmark 1992-2001 open cohort)
• Immigrants from Turkey and Morocco, and local-born populations aged 20-69 years
• Age-standardised mortality rates by sex, country of residence and country of birth
• Mortality rate ratios calculated using Poisson regression
Objective To assess mortality differences among Turkish- and Moroccan-born immigrants living in three European countries with distinct types of integration policies
• Netherlands à multiculturalist • France à assimilationist • Denmark à exclusionist
Background • European countries have followed
different models of integration policy
• Integration policies may influence migrants’ health through social determinants
• Recently an association has been shown between country integration policy model and immigrants’ self-rated health (Malmusi 2014)
Within-country inequalities in mortality Age-adjusted Mortality Rate Ratios. Ref: Local-born population
Conclusion • This study suggests that different macro-level policy contexts may influence immigrants' health. • Comparable mortality registrations in Europe with detailed socio-demographic information on immigrants might help
disentangle this association
Men Women
Age-standardised mortality rate by sex, country of birth and country of residence
Migrant Integration Policy Index 2007 LCA (Meuleman & Reeskens 2008). Blue=Multiculturalist, Orange=Assimilationist, Red= Exclusionist
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Women Results • Compared with their peers in the Netherlands, Turkish-born had
higher mortality in Denmark (MRR men 1.92; 95% CI 1.74-2.13 and women 2.11; 1.80-2.47) but lower in France (men 0.64; 0.59-0.69 and women 0.58; 0.51-0.67).
• The mortality differences between immigrants and local-born population were largest in Denmark and lowest in France.
• These patterns were consistent across all age groups, and more marked for cardiovascular diseases.
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