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Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China

Internal migrants are the individuals who migrate between regions in one country. The number of internal migrants were estimated at 245 million in China in 2013. Results were inconsistent in the literature about the relationship between their health statuses and social integration. The main differen...

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Autores principales: Lin, Yanwei, Zhang, Qi, Chen, Wen, Shi, Jingrong, Han, Siqi, Song, Xiaolei, Xu, Yong, Ling, Li
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4749174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26863008
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148397
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author Lin, Yanwei
Zhang, Qi
Chen, Wen
Shi, Jingrong
Han, Siqi
Song, Xiaolei
Xu, Yong
Ling, Li
author_facet Lin, Yanwei
Zhang, Qi
Chen, Wen
Shi, Jingrong
Han, Siqi
Song, Xiaolei
Xu, Yong
Ling, Li
author_sort Lin, Yanwei
collection PubMed
description Internal migrants are the individuals who migrate between regions in one country. The number of internal migrants were estimated at 245 million in China in 2013. Results were inconsistent in the literature about the relationship between their health statuses and social integration. The main difference exists on how to measure the social integration and whether health statuses of internal migrants improve with years of residence. To complement the existing literature, this study measured social integration more comprehensively and estimated the internal migrants’ health statuses with varying years of residence, and explored the associations between the migrants’ social integration and health. We used the data from 2014 Internal Migrant Dynamic Monitoring Survey of Health and Family Planning in ZhongShan, China. Health status was measured from four aspects: self-reported health, subjective well-being, perception of stress, mental health. We measured social integration through four dimensions: economy, social communication, acculturation, and self-identity. The analyses used multiple linear regressions to examine the associations between self-reported health, subjective well-being, and perception of stress, mental health and social integration. The analytical sample included 1,999 households of the internal migrants and 1,997 local registered households, who were permanent residents in ZhongShan. Among the internal migrants, Adults in the labor force, who were aged 25 to 44 years old, accounted for 91.2% of the internal migrant population, while 74.6% of the registered population were in that age group. Median residential time among migrants was 2.8 (1.3–6.2) years, and 20.2% of them were migrating in the same Guangdong province. Except for mental health, other health statuses among migrants had significant differences compared with local registered population, e.g. self-reported health was better, but subjective well-being was worse. However, these health measurements were improved with more years of residence. Moreover, our results show that two aspects of social integration, economic integration and self-identity, were significantly associated with health status. Subjective feeling of relative social status levels were more associated with health, which prompted the attention to social fairness and the creation of a fair and respectful culture. More interventions could be experimented, such as encouraging internal migrants to participate in community activities more actively, educating local registered residents to treat internal migrants more equally, and developing self-identity among internal migrants. Better social, economic, and cultural environment can benefit internal migrants’ health statuses.
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spelling pubmed-47491742016-02-26 Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China Lin, Yanwei Zhang, Qi Chen, Wen Shi, Jingrong Han, Siqi Song, Xiaolei Xu, Yong Ling, Li PLoS One Research Article Internal migrants are the individuals who migrate between regions in one country. The number of internal migrants were estimated at 245 million in China in 2013. Results were inconsistent in the literature about the relationship between their health statuses and social integration. The main difference exists on how to measure the social integration and whether health statuses of internal migrants improve with years of residence. To complement the existing literature, this study measured social integration more comprehensively and estimated the internal migrants’ health statuses with varying years of residence, and explored the associations between the migrants’ social integration and health. We used the data from 2014 Internal Migrant Dynamic Monitoring Survey of Health and Family Planning in ZhongShan, China. Health status was measured from four aspects: self-reported health, subjective well-being, perception of stress, mental health. We measured social integration through four dimensions: economy, social communication, acculturation, and self-identity. The analyses used multiple linear regressions to examine the associations between self-reported health, subjective well-being, and perception of stress, mental health and social integration. The analytical sample included 1,999 households of the internal migrants and 1,997 local registered households, who were permanent residents in ZhongShan. Among the internal migrants, Adults in the labor force, who were aged 25 to 44 years old, accounted for 91.2% of the internal migrant population, while 74.6% of the registered population were in that age group. Median residential time among migrants was 2.8 (1.3–6.2) years, and 20.2% of them were migrating in the same Guangdong province. Except for mental health, other health statuses among migrants had significant differences compared with local registered population, e.g. self-reported health was better, but subjective well-being was worse. However, these health measurements were improved with more years of residence. Moreover, our results show that two aspects of social integration, economic integration and self-identity, were significantly associated with health status. Subjective feeling of relative social status levels were more associated with health, which prompted the attention to social fairness and the creation of a fair and respectful culture. More interventions could be experimented, such as encouraging internal migrants to participate in community activities more actively, educating local registered residents to treat internal migrants more equally, and developing self-identity among internal migrants. Better social, economic, and cultural environment can benefit internal migrants’ health statuses. Public Library of Science 2016-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4749174/ /pubmed/26863008 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148397 Text en © 2016 Lin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lin, Yanwei
Zhang, Qi
Chen, Wen
Shi, Jingrong
Han, Siqi
Song, Xiaolei
Xu, Yong
Ling, Li
Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China
title Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China
title_full Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China
title_fullStr Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China
title_full_unstemmed Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China
title_short Association between Social Integration and Health among Internal Migrants in ZhongShan, China
title_sort association between social integration and health among internal migrants in zhongshan, china
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4749174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26863008
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148397
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