Decomposing the differences in healthy life expectancy between migrants and natives: the ‘healthy migrant effect’ and its age variations in Australia

IF 1.6 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY JOURNAL OF POPULATION RESEARCH Pub Date : 2023-11-29 DOI:10.1007/s12546-023-09325-8
Guogui Huang, Fei Guo, Lucy Taksa, Zhiming Cheng, Massimiliano Tani, Lihua Liu, Klaus F. Zimmermann, Marika Franklin
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Abstract

Whether the ‘healthy migrant effect’ exhibits different patterns in mortality and morbidity and how such patterns change during the life course have not been adequately understood in the literature. Using the datasets of the Australian Bureau of Statistics, this study presents an in-depth investigation of the healthy migrant effect and its age variations in Australia. Specifically, this study estimates life expectancy (LE) and healthy life expectancy (HLE) of the Australia-born and overseas-born populations, as well as eight Australian migrant groups, and decomposes the HLE differences into mortality and morbidity differences from three dimensions: age, gender and country of birth. The results reveal that compared with the Australia-born population, the overseas-born population enjoys a prominently longer LE; however, they suffer a similar or lower HLE after age 65 and a lower HLE/LE ratio throughout all ages. Young overseas-born adults manifest a more significant health advantage in both mortality and morbidity than early-life and older overseas-born individuals; however, the morbidity advantage of young migrants, particularly those who are female and originated from culturally different countries, declines dramatically with ageing. The results suggest that overall, migrants do not have the same advantage in morbidity as they do in mortality and that health advantages of migrants decreases with time in both dimensions of health and more rapidly for morbidity. The results suggest that pertinent policies are needed to reduce acculturation-related challenges and to mitigate the decline in migrants’ health in the post-migration environment to ensure better quality of life outcomes of migrants.

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分解移民和本地人之间健康预期寿命的差异:澳大利亚的"健康移民效应"及其年龄变化
“健康移民效应”是否在死亡率和发病率方面表现出不同的模式,以及这种模式在生命过程中如何变化,在文献中尚未得到充分理解。利用澳大利亚统计局的数据集,本研究对澳大利亚的健康移民效应及其年龄变化进行了深入调查。具体而言,本研究估算了澳大利亚出生人口和海外出生人口以及8个澳大利亚移民群体的预期寿命(LE)和健康预期寿命(HLE),并从年龄、性别和出生国三个维度将预期寿命差异分解为死亡率和发病率差异。结果表明,与澳大利亚出生人口相比,海外出生人口的寿命明显更长;然而,他们在65岁之后的HLE相似或更低,并且在所有年龄段的HLE/LE比都更低。年轻的海外出生的成年人在死亡率和发病率方面比年轻和年长的海外出生的人表现出更显著的健康优势;然而,年轻移徙者,特别是来自文化不同国家的女性移徙者的发病率优势随着年龄的增长而急剧下降。结果表明,总体而言,移民在发病率方面的优势与在死亡率方面的优势不同,移民的健康优势在健康的两个方面都随着时间的推移而下降,在发病率方面下降得更快。研究结果表明,需要制定相关政策来减少与文化适应相关的挑战,缓解移民后环境中健康状况的下降,以确保移民的生活质量更好。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The Journal of Population Research is a peer-reviewed, international journal which publishes papers on demography and population-related issues. Coverage is not restricted geographically. The Journal publishes substantive empirical analyses, theoretical works, applied research and contributions to methodology. Submissions may take the form of original research papers, perspectives, review articles and shorter technical research notes. Special issues emanating from conferences and other meetings are also considered.
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