Epidemiologia e Prevenzione
Volume 41, Issue 3-4, 2017, Pages 33-40

Perceived discrimination at work for being an immigrant: A study on self-perceived mental health status among immigrants in Italy [Discriminazione percepita sul luogo di lavoro in quanto straniero: Uno studio sulla salute mentale percepita dagli immigrati in Italia] (Article)

Di Napoli A.* , Gatta R. , Rossi A. , Perez M. , Costanzo G. , Mirisola C. , Petrelli A.
  • a Istituto Nazionale per la Promozione della Salute delle Popolazioni, Roma, Italy
  • b Istituto Nazionale per la Promozione della Salute delle Popolazioni, Roma, Italy
  • c Istituto Nazionale per la Promozione della Salute delle Popolazioni, Roma, Italy
  • d Istituto Nazionale di Statistica (Istat), Roma, Italy
  • e Istituto Nazionale per la Promozione della Salute delle Popolazioni, Roma, Italy
  • f Istituto Nazionale per la Promozione della Salute delle Popolazioni, Roma, Italy
  • g Istituto Nazionale per la Promozione della Salute delle Popolazioni, Roma, Italy

Abstract

BACKGROUND: exposure to discrimination is widely understood as a social determinant of psychophysical health and a contributing factor to health inequities among social groups. Few studies exist, particularly in Italy, about the effects of discrimination among immigrants at workplace. OBJECTIVES: to analyse the association between perceived discrimination at work for being an immigrant and mental health status among immigrants in Italy. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: a sub-sample of 12,408 immigrants residing in Italy was analysed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: data came from the survey "Social conditions and integration of foreign citizens in Italy", carried out in 2011-2012 by the Italian National Institute of Statistics (Istat). Self-perceived mental health status was measured through mental component summary (MCS) of SF-12 questionnaire, assuming as worse health status MCS score distribution ≤1st quartile. In order to evaluate the probability of poor health status, a multivariate log-binomial model was performed assuming: discrimination at work for being an immigrant as determinant variable; age, gender, educational level, employment status, area of origin, residence in Italy, length of stay in Italy, self-perceived loneliness and satisfaction about life as potential confounding variables. RESULTS: among immigrants, 15.8% referred discrimination at his/her workplace in Italy for being an immigrant. Higher probability of poor mental health status was observed for immigrants who referred discrimination at workplace (Prevalence Rate Ratio - PRR: 1.16) who arrived in Italy since at least 5 years (PRR: 1.14), for not employed subjects (PRR: 1.31), and for people from the Americas (PRR: 1.14). Lower probability of poor mental health status was found in immigrants from Western-Central Asia (PRR: 0.83) and Eastern-Pacific Asia (PRR: 0.79). Compared to immigrants residing in North-Eastern Italy, higher probability of worse mental health status was observed in people who resided in Northern-Western (PRR: 1.30), Central (PRR: 1.26), and Southern (PRR: 1.15) Italian regions. CONCLUSIONS: our fndings confrm that discrimination at workplace for being an immigrant is a risk factor for self-perceived mental health among immigrants in Italy, suggesting that an overall public health response is essential in addition to work-based interventions. Improving working conditions, promoting organisational strategies to support coping behaviours, and challenging discrimination can improve mental health status of immigrants. © 2017 Zadig s.r.l. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Mental health discrimination Workplace immigrants

Index Keywords

human middle aged statistics and numerical data comparative study health status Mental Disorders mental disease Surveys and Questionnaires Humans migrant workplace male Emigrants and Immigrants female questionnaire self concept adult Prejudice Italy

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85047766268&doi=10.19191%2fEP17.3-4S1.P033.063&partnerID=40&md5=09adb8e61311cbd78cd7b1a8497dd95b

DOI: 10.19191/EP17.3-4S1.P033.063
ISSN: 11209763
Cited by: 2
Original Language: Italian