The violence of uncertainty: Empirical evidence on how asylum waiting time undermines refugee health

被引:22
|
作者
Phillimore, Jenny [1 ]
Cheung, Sin Yi [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Birmingham, Sch Social Policy Sociol & Criminol, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
[2] Cardiff Univ, Sch Social Sci, King Edward VII Ave, Cardiff CF10 3WT, Wales
关键词
Asylum seeker waiting time; Violent uncertainty; Refugee emotional health; Refugee physical health; Gender; Religion; Asylum policy; Refugee integration; MENTAL-HEALTH; SEEKERS; LIFE; INTEGRATION; FAMILIES;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114154
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The idea of violent uncertainty was first introduced in the New England Journal of Medicine (Grace et al., 2018) making claims about the deleterious impacts of insecure immigration status on the health of migrants. Policies of uncertainty are said to directly and indirectly create harm by impacting on individual's health via detention and public degradation and undermining healthcare services. We offer original empirical evidence indicating an association with uncertainty, in the form of asylum waiting times, on refugees' self-reported health. We devise four hypotheses that: long waiting time for asylum decisions increases likelihood of self-reported health problems and the effect persists overtime, that female refugees report higher levels of health problems resulting from uncertainty and religion moderates the association between health and uncertainty. We use data from the UK longitudinal Survey of New Refugees wherein all new refugees were sent a baseline survey immediately after receiving refugee status and then follow-up surveys 21 months later. The findings show longer asylum waiting time is associated with poor health. Female refugees were more likely to report poor emotional and physical health. The negative effect of asylum waiting time on emotional health persists 21 months post settlement and is worse for women. The hypothesisabout the ameliorating effect of religion is only partially supported. Our findings supports existing theory and qualitative studies about the deleterious effects of using policies of waitingrelated uncertainty for managing migration. Given the wide use of such policies in the Global North, our work is suggestive of likely generalisability. Thus, countries with large refugee populations might want to consider our findings when developing asylum policy which minimises impact on refugee health.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [21] Evaluation of a police and social services domestic violence program - Empirical evidence needed to inform public health policies
    Hovell, MF
    Seid, AG
    Liles, S
    VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, 2006, 12 (02) : 137 - 159
  • [22] How do online users perceive health risks during public health emergencies? Empirical evidence from China
    Huang, Shijing
    Zhou, Cheng
    Yuan, Qinjian
    Chen, Guohua
    Shen, Hongzhou
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 14
  • [23] PREDICTING VIOLENCE: THE WHY, THE HOW, AND THE WHAT TO DO: A BEST-EVIDENCE GUIDE FOR THE MENTAL HEALTH PRACTITIONER
    Sood, Aradhana Bela
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 56 (10): : S20 - S21
  • [24] Systematic review and evidence mapping of empirical studies on health status and medical care among refugees and asylum seekers in Germany (1990-2014)
    Bozorgmehr, Kayvan
    Mohsenpour, Amir
    Saure, Daniel
    Stock, Christian
    Loerbroks, Adrian
    Joos, Stefanie
    Schneider, Christine
    BUNDESGESUNDHEITSBLATT-GESUNDHEITSFORSCHUNG-GESUNDHEITSSCHUTZ, 2016, 59 (05) : 599 - 620
  • [25] How online health community participation affects physicians' performance in hospitals: Empirical evidence from China
    Wu, Hong
    Deng, Zhaohua
    Wang, Bin
    Wang, Hao
    INFORMATION & MANAGEMENT, 2021, 58 (06)
  • [26] How do bankruptcy risk estimations change in time? Empirical evidence from listed US companies
    Lohmann, Christian
    Moellenhoff, Steffen
    FINANCE RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 58
  • [27] How oil prices, gold prices, uncertainty and risk impact Islamic and conventional stocks? Empirical evidence from QARDL technique
    Godil, Danish Iqbal
    Sarwat, Salman
    Sharif, Arshian
    Jermsittiparsert, Kittisak
    RESOURCES POLICY, 2020, 66 (66)
  • [28] How does oil policy uncertainty influence resource rents? New empirical evidence from Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
    Farooq, Umar
    Wen, Jun
    Aldawsari, Salem Hamad
    Tabash, Mosab I.
    Khudoykulov, Khurshid
    ECONOMICS & POLITICS, 2025, 37 (01) : 146 - 168
  • [29] The 'toxic trio' (domestic violence, substance misuse and mental ill-health): How good is the evidence base?
    Skinner, Guy C. M.
    Bywaters, Paul W. B.
    Bilson, Andy
    Duschinsky, Robbie
    Clements, Keith
    Hutchinson, Dustin
    CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW, 2021, 120
  • [30] The Impact of Waiting Time on Health Gains from Surgery: Evidence from a National Patient-reported Outcome Dataset
    Nikolova, Silviya
    Harrison, Mark
    Sutton, Matt
    HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2016, 25 (08) : 955 - 968