Social Science and Medicine
Volume 40, Issue 6, 1995, Pages 777-787

Ethnicity, social class and health. A population-based study on the influence of social factors on self-reported illness in 223 Latin American refugees, 333 Finnish and 126 South European labour migrants and 841 Swedish controls (Article)

Sundquist J.*
  • a Health Sciences Centre, University of Lund, Lund, Sweden

Abstract

This article shows the influence of ethnicity and social class on self-rated illness compared with social factors and lifestyle. We were particularly interested in health differences between refugees and labour migrants. The study population consisted of 223 Latin American refugees domiciled in Lund, 333 Finnish and 126 South European labour migrants and 841 Swedish controls. The data were analysed unmatched with logistic regression (multivariate analyses) in main effect models. The strongest independent risk indicator for long-term illness was being a Latin American refugee, with an estimated odds ratio of 2.78 (1.95-3.81), or a South European 1.80 (1.17-2.71). Low social class, low material standard, age 45-64 years and overweight were significantly associated with long-term illness. There was a strong association between being a Latin American refugee and ill-health, followed by a weaker association for South European labour migrants and no association for Finlanders and Swedes when controlled for other social factors in logistic regression. Low social class, age 45-64 years, poor social network, not feeling secure in daily life and not taking regular exercise were associated with ill-health. South Europeans were the only ethnic group who showed an association to working impairment and disability. Latin Americans were significantly associated with acute illness with an estimated odds ratio of 2.00 (1.32-2.94). In conclusion, ethnicity was shown to be an independent powerful social dimension compared with social class in relation to self-rated illness. © 1995.

Author Keywords

labour migrant Illness Social class Ethnicity Lifestyle Refugee Population survey

Index Keywords

Migrant Workers immigrant lifestyle Life Style Finland refugee Latin America exercise Europe Disabled Persons human Refugees Odds Ratio Ethnic Groups controlled study social aspect obesity health status comparative study Aged Logistic Models ethnology Disease Sweden health impact Adolescent male female Socioeconomic Factors risk factor Multivariate Analysis population research Article Support, Non-U.S. Gov't adult human experiment age Age Factors normal human ethnicity Transients and Migrants social class medical geography self-reported illness Middle Age

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0028972071&doi=10.1016%2f0277-9536%2894%2900146-K&partnerID=40&md5=b34bae3c848ea20d3b010c15fc643049

DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(94)00146-K
ISSN: 02779536
Cited by: 99
Original Language: English