International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Volume 9, Issue 12, 2012, Pages 4403-4432

Comparing sociodemographic factors associated with disability between immigrants and the chilean-born: Are there different stories to tell? (Article) (Open Access)

Cabieses B.* , Pickett K.E. , Tunstall H.
  • a Universidad del Desarrollo, Avenida Las Condes 12.348, Lo Barnechea Santiago 7710162, Chile, Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom
  • b Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom
  • c Department of Geography, University of Edinburgh, Drummond Street, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, United Kingdom

Abstract

This study explored a range of sociodemographic factors associated with disability among international immigrants in Chile, and compared them to the Chilean-born. Secondary data analysis of the Chilean population-based survey CASEN-2006 was conducted (268,873 participants). Main health outcomes: any disability and six different types of disability: visual, hearing, learning, physical, psychiatric and speaking (binary outcomes). Sociodemographic variables: Demographic factors (age, sex, marital status, urban/rural, ethnicity), socioeconomic status (SES: income, education, employment status, and an integrated indicator combining the SES measures through cluster analysis for the immigrant population), material factors (overcrowding, sanitation, housing quality) and migration related (country of origin and length of stay). Immigrants reported a significantly lower prevalence of any disability (3.55%), visual (1.00%) and physical disability (0.38%). Factors associated with any disability among immigrants were age, low SES or over 20 years duration of residence in Chile; while a range of sociodemographic factors were associated with disability in the Chilean-born. Conditional regression models by age group varied between populations, but SES remained significantly associated with disability across immigrants and the Chilean-born. However, there are no similar patterns of factors associated to different types of disability between the populations under study. Factors associated with disability varied between populations under study, but SES showed a consistent association with any disability in immigrants and the Chilean-born. Types of disability showed different patterns of factors associated to them between populations, which suggest the great complexity of underlying mechanisms related to disability in Chile. © 2012 by the authors.

Author Keywords

Disability Social epidemiology Latin america Population-based study Migrant population

Index Keywords

speech disorder immigrant regression analysis demography health survey Disabled Persons human epidemiology sex difference middle aged ethnic group controlled study health status Aged socioeconomic status housing Cross-Sectional Studies mental disease marriage cluster analysis sanitation social status ethnic difference Humans Adolescent male urban rural difference Emigrants and Immigrants residential area Socioeconomic Factors health geography female visual disorder demographic survey hearing disorder population research health services prevalence learning disorder Article Chilean major clinical study adult Age Factors data analysis Chile disability outcome assessment age distribution physical disability Crowding immigrant population

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84871571240&doi=10.3390%2fijerph9124403&partnerID=40&md5=e23b7ab18a28ec75bc8e7e5f50ff8833

DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9124403
ISSN: 16617827
Cited by: 6
Original Language: English