Changes in Self-Rated Health Right After Immigration: A Panel Study of Economic, Social, Cultural, and Emotional Explanations of Self-Rated Health Among Immigrants in the Netherlands

被引:19
|
作者
Lubbers, Marcel [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Gijsberts, Merove [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demog Inst NIDI KNA, The Hague, Netherlands
[2] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Dept Sociol, Nijmegen, Netherlands
[3] Univ Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands
[4] Netherlands Inst Social Res, The Hague, Netherlands
[5] Univ Utrecht, ASW Cultural Divers & Youth, Utrecht, Netherlands
关键词
recent immigrants; immigrant health; healthy immigrant effect; discrimination; homesickness;
D O I
10.3389/fsoc.2019.00045
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Immigrants are often found to rate their health better than the native population does. It is, however, suggested that this healthy immigrant effect declines with an enduring length of stay. With Dutch panel data, we investigate which patterns in self-rated health can be found among immigrants shortly after their migration. We test to what extent economic, social, cultural and emotional explanations affect the changes that immigrants report in self-rated health. Based on a four-wave panel, our results support the immigrants' health decline hypothesis, since the self-rated health decreases in the first years after immigration to the Netherlands. The major change occurs between immigrants rating their health no longer as "very good," but as "good." Shortly after immigration, self-rated health is associated with being employed and a higher income. Hazardous work and physically heavy work decrease self-rated health. Notwithstanding these effects, social, cultural, and emotional explanations turn out to be stronger. A lack of Dutch friends, perceptions of discrimination, perceived cultural distance, and feelings of homesickness strongly affect self-rated health. Furthermore, in understanding changes in self-rated health, the effects of making contact with Dutch people and changes in the perception of discrimination are definitive. However, contact with Dutch people did not decrease and discrimination did not increase over time, making them ineligible as an explanation for overall health decrease. Only the small effect that first-borns have may count as a reason for decreased self-rated health, since many of the recent immigrants we followed started families in the first years after immigration. Our findings leave room for the coined "acculturation to an unhealthier lifestyle thesis," and we see promise in a stronger focus on the role of unmet expectations in the first years after immigration.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Social Isolation, Self-Rated Health, and Self-Rated Oral Health among African Americans
    Taylor, Harry Owen
    Taylor, Robert Joseph
    Tsuchiya, Kazumi
    Chatters, Linda
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR AND UNDERSERVED, 2024, 35 (01)
  • [2] Social Capital and Self-Rated Health Among Older Korean Immigrants
    Kim, Bum Jung
    Harris, Lesley Maradik
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED GERONTOLOGY, 2013, 32 (08) : 997 - 1014
  • [3] SOCIAL CAPITAL AND SELF-RATED HEALTH AMONG OLDER KOREAN IMMIGRANTS
    Kim, B.
    Harris, L. B. Maradik
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2012, 52 : 558 - 558
  • [4] Social and Cultural Meanings of Self-Rated Health: Arab Immigrants in the United States
    Abdulrahim, Sawsan
    Ajrouch, Kristine
    [J]. QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2010, 20 (09) : 1229 - 1240
  • [5] Self-rated health among physicians
    Baubinas, Algirdas
    Gurevicius, Romualdas
    Jankauskiene, Konstancija
    Salyga, Jonas
    Kairys, Jonas
    Jurkstiene, Vilma
    Kevelaitis, Egidijus
    [J]. MEDICINA-LITHUANIA, 2009, 45 (07): : 557 - 564
  • [6] Ethnic differences in self-rated health in the Netherlands
    Devillé, W
    Westert, G
    [J]. ETHNICITY & HEALTH, 2004, 9 : S89 - S90
  • [7] Correlates of Self-Rated Health and Self-Rated Mental Health in Older Chinese Americans
    Jang, Yuri
    Huang, Ya-Ching
    Yoon, Hyunwoo
    Lin, Shumin
    [J]. SOCIAL WORK IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2016, 31 (04) : 309 - 315
  • [8] Understanding self-rated health
    Fayers, PM
    Sprangers, MAG
    [J]. LANCET, 2002, 359 (9302): : 187 - 188
  • [9] Social capital and self-rated health in Argentina
    Ronconi, Lucas
    Brown, Timothy T.
    Scheffler, Richard M.
    [J]. HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2012, 21 (02) : 201 - 208
  • [10] Social determinants of self-rated health in women
    Jovanovic, V. Mijatovic
    Milijasevic, D.
    Cankovic, S.
    Susnjevic, S.
    Harhaji, S.
    Tomasevic, T.
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 30 : V642 - V642