Pediatria de Atencion Primaria
Volume 11, Issue 43, 2009, Pages 439-450

Socio-familiar aspects of the immigrant population in Catalonia [Aspectos sociofamiliares de la población inmigrante en Cataluña] (Article)

Riera Vidal M.D. , Baraza Mendoza M.C. , Masvidal Aliberch R.M. , de Frutos Gallego E. , Estabanell Buxó A. , Cruz Rodríguez C. , Miguel Gil B. , Guzmán Molina C.
  • a CAP Raval Sud, Barcelona, Spain
  • b CAP Dr. Lluís Sayé, Barcelona, Spain
  • c CAP Dr. Lluís Sayé, Barcelona, Spain
  • d CAP Dr. Lluís Sayé, Barcelona, Spain
  • e CAP Gòtic, Barcelona, Spain
  • f CAP Gòtic, Barcelona, Spain
  • g CAP Dr. Lluís Sayé, Barcelona, Spain
  • h CAP Raval Sud, Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

Objectives: to acquire a better understanding of socio-familiar features of the immigrant population attended in the pediatric offices in Catalonia. Methodology: prospective, transversal and multicentric study. Population: children aged 6 months to 15 years, who had arrived to Catalonia less than one year before, and who were of low income countries' origin. Variables: sex, age, country of origin, blood relationship between the parents, date of migration and first visit to the medical office, main caregiver, complete/non-complete family, home overcrowding index, religion and parents' education. Results: one thousand two hundred and twenty-six patients were studied, 659 males (53.8%) and 567 females (46.2%). They had come from 47 countries, which were grouped into 9 different "origin" groups. Average age of the sample: 7.5 years. Average time between arrival to Catalonia and first visit to the doctor: 1 month. Main caregiver: mother or father in 96.9% of the cases. In 70.9% of the cases, the family was complete. Parents' blood relationship: 13.2% of the cases. The biggest home overcrowding index (IH > 2) was founded among Indian-Pakistan (49.7%), Maghreb (41.6%) and other Asian (41.8%) families. Family religion: Muslims (45.9%), Catholic (38.8%) and other Christian doctrines (10.5%). Five point five percent of parents and 16.4% of mothers had never gone to school. Conclusions: in order to provide the best medical assistance to immigrants, it is necessary to have a good understanding of their cultural and social background.

Author Keywords

Housing Cultural diversity Education consanguinity Childhood Immigration

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-73649139286&partnerID=40&md5=e82812da84e75fd06c7b3b9251194011

ISSN: 11397632
Original Language: Spanish