Nutricion Hospitalaria
Volume 30, Issue 5, 2014, Pages 1008-1019

The social determinants of health of the child-adolescent immigration and its influence on the nutritional status: Systematic review [Los determinantes sociales de la inmigracion infanto-juvenil y su influencia sobre el estado nutricional: Revision sistematica] (Review)

Moussa K.C. , Sanz-Valero J.* , Wanden-Berghe C.
  • a Department of Public Health and History of Science, Miguel Hernandez University, Elche, Spain
  • b Department of Public Health and History of Science, Miguel Hernandez University, Elche, Spain, Department of Public Health and History of Science, University of Alicante, Alicante, Spain
  • c Department of Pharmacy, CEU Cardenal Herrera University, Elche, Spain, Home Care Unit, General University Hospital of Alicante, Alicante, Spain

Abstract

Objective: to review the social determinants of health more characteristic of the child and adolescents of immigrants, by reviewing the literature and assess its effect on nutritional status.Methods: a systematic review was performed using Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) in PubMed (Medline) and The Cochrane Library, in order to identify undetected studies; articles bibliographic lists were examined. The final election was done according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. No restrictions on sex and ethnicity of the participants. STROBE checkpoints were used for an information and methodological quality control. As Social Determinants of Health (SDH); social, demographic and economic conditions were considered for the study of their effect on the nutritional status.Results: from 31 identified articles 18 are included in this study, 17(94,4%) had a good or excellent quality. Hispanic and African were the most studied ethnicities; birth place and parent’s residence period were used for generational classification. Alimentary culture and linguistic isolation of the first generation have a protective effect preventing from overweight and obesity risk while it decrease in second and third generation due to the experienced acculturation process equalizing their weight gain to natives; which prevalence is higher among Hispanics. No relation was found for nutritional status differences between sexes neither alimentary aids protective effect hypothesis was confirmed.Conclusions: the SDH with greater influence on child-adolescent immigrants were the socio-demographic conditions; among them: residence period distinguish the three identified generations while linguistic barrier and ethnic background are truly influential on the biological response to the experimented change caused by the acculturation process, establishing differences in the nutritional status. © 2014 Grupo Aula Medica S.A. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Nutritional status emigrants and immigrants Obesity overweight Body weight changes

Index Keywords

Ethnic Groups Emigrants and Immigrants social determinants of health ethnic group health status Social Environment Emigration and Immigration Adolescent nutritional status meta analysis human Humans migrant migration Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84908662496&doi=10.3305%2fnh.2014.30.5.7732&partnerID=40&md5=7a84af8ac52dd8a8035db0e2b89418a7

DOI: 10.3305/nh.2014.30.5.7732
ISSN: 02121611
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English