Access to mental health consultations by immigrants and refugees in Canada.

IF 2.7 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Edward Ng, Haozhen Zhang
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Background: Few quantitative studies have used national-level data to examine access to mental health consultation (MHC) by immigrants in Canada, and even fewer studies investigate MHCs using the following variables: immigrant admission category, duration in Canada since landing and world source regions. This study examines MHCs by immigrants and refugees-compared with those of Canadian-born respondents-while controlling for self-reported mental health (SRMH) and immigrant characteristics, using a population-based survey linked to immigrant landing information. This study, which is based on a linked database, allows for much richer insight into immigrant populations than most previous studies.

Data and methods: Based on data from four cycles (2011 to 2014) of the Canadian Community Health Survey linked to data from the Longitudinal Immigration Database, the odds ratios of having had MHCs are compared between the Canadian-born population and immigrants by immigration dimensions, while controlling for SRMH. Results are hierarchically adjusted for age, sex, socioeconomic factors and sense of belonging.

Results: After the above-mentioned factors were controlled for, immigrants were much less likely than Canadian-born respondents to access MHCs. Specifically, compared with the Canadian-born population that had high levels of SRMH, immigrants with high levels of SRMH were statistically less likely to have had an MHC (odds ratio [OR]=0.5, 95% confidence interval [CI] from 0.4 to 0.5), while those with low SRMH levels were more likely to report an MHC (OR=4.8, 95% CI from 4.5 to 5.1, for the Canadian-born population but OR=1.8, 95% CI from 1.5 to 2.1, for immigrants). Most Asian immigrants with low SRMH levels were only as likely to report MHCs as Canadian-born respondents with high SRMH levels. Refugees with low SRMH levels also had only a slightly elevated MHC level (OR=1.6, 95% CI from 1.1 to 2.3) compared with Canadian-born individuals with high SRMH levels. Overall, refugees were not more likely than immigrants of other admission categories to report having had an MHC, even though previous findings have shown that refugees report low levels of SRMH.

Discussion: This study provides new evidence on the differences in access to MHC between Canadian-born individuals and immigrants by various characteristics, while controlling for SRMH. Results probably reflect the structural or cultural barriers to MHC and point to a possible pathway to either maintain or improve mental health among immigrants.

加拿大移民和难民获得心理健康咨询的机会。
背景:很少有定量研究使用国家层面的数据来检查加拿大移民获得心理健康咨询(MHC)的情况,甚至更少的研究使用以下变量来调查MHC:移民入境类别,自登陆以来在加拿大的持续时间和世界来源地区。本研究考察了移民和难民的mhc——与加拿大出生的受访者进行比较——同时控制了自我报告的心理健康(SRMH)和移民特征,使用了一项与移民登陆信息相关的基于人口的调查。这项基于链接数据库的研究,比以前的大多数研究对移民人口有了更丰富的了解。数据和方法:基于加拿大社区健康调查四个周期(2011年至2014年)的数据,与纵向移民数据库的数据相关联,在控制smrmh的情况下,通过移民维度比较了加拿大出生人口和移民之间患有mhc的比值比。结果根据年龄、性别、社会经济因素和归属感进行了等级调整。结果:在控制上述因素后,移民获得mhc的可能性远低于加拿大出生的受访者。具体来说,与具有高水平SRMH的加拿大出生人口相比,具有高水平SRMH的移民在统计学上不太可能发生MHC(比值比[OR]=0.5, 95%可信区间[CI]从0.4到0.5),而具有低水平SRMH的移民更可能报告MHC (OR=4.8, 95% CI从4.5到5.1,对于加拿大出生人口,OR=1.8, 95% CI从1.5到2.1,对于移民)。大多数低SRMH水平的亚洲移民报告mhc的可能性与加拿大出生的高SRMH水平的受访者一样。与加拿大出生的高SRMH水平的人相比,低SRMH水平的难民MHC水平也只有轻微升高(OR=1.6, 95% CI从1.1到2.3)。总体而言,难民并不比其他入境类别的移民更有可能报告有MHC,尽管先前的研究结果表明难民报告的SRMH水平较低。讨论:本研究在控制SRMH的情况下,为加拿大出生个体和移民之间通过各种特征获得MHC的差异提供了新的证据。结果可能反映了MHC的结构或文化障碍,并指出了维持或改善移民心理健康的可能途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Reports
Health Reports PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
4.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Health Reports publishes original research on diverse topics related to understanding and improving the health of populations and the delivery of health care. We publish studies based on analyses of Canadian national/provincial representative surveys or Canadian national/provincial administrative databases, as well as results of international comparative health research. Health Reports encourages the sharing of methodological information among those engaged in the analysis of health surveys or administrative databases. Use of the most current data available is advised for all submissions.
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