Mortality Advantage Reversed: The Causes of Death Driving All-Cause Mortality Differentials Between Immigrants, the Descendants of Immigrants and Ancestral Natives in Sweden, 1997-2016.

IF 1.9 2区 社会学 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Matthew Wallace
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

A small but growing body of studies have documented the alarming mortality situation of adult descendants of migrants in a number of European countries. Nearly all of them have focused on all-cause mortality to reveal these important health inequalities. This paper takes advantage of the Swedish population registers to study all-cause and cause-specific mortality among men and women aged 15-44 in Sweden from 1997 to 2016 to a level of granularity unparalleled elsewhere. It adopts a multi-generation, multi-origin and multi-cause-of-death approach. Using extended, competing-risks survival models, it aims to show (1) how the all-cause mortality of immigrants arriving as adults (the G1), immigrants arriving as children (the G1.5) and children of immigrants born in Sweden to at least one immigrant parent (the G2) differs versus ancestral Swedes and (2) what causes-of-deaths drive these differentials. For all-cause mortality, most G1 (not Finns or Sub-Saharan Africans) have a mortality advantage. This contrasts with a near systematic reversal in the mortality of the G1.5 and G2 (notably among men), which is driven by excess accident and injury, suicide, substance use and other external cause mortality. Given that external causes-of-death are preventable and avoidable, the findings raise questions about integration processes, the levels of inequality immigrant populations are exposed to in Sweden and ultimately, whether the legacy of immigration has been positive. Strengths of the study include the use of quality data and advanced methods, the granularity of the estimates, and the provision of evidence that highlights the precarious mortality situation of the seldom-studied G1.5.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10680-022-09637-0.

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死亡率优势逆转:1997-2016年瑞典移民、移民后代和祖先本地人之间全因死亡率差异的死亡原因
为数不多但越来越多的研究表明,在一些欧洲国家,移民的成年后代的死亡率令人震惊。几乎所有这些研究都侧重于全因死亡率,以揭示这些重要的健康不平等现象。本文利用瑞典人口登记来研究1997年至2016年瑞典15-44岁男性和女性的全因和特定原因死亡率,其粒度水平在其他地方是无与伦比的。它采用多代、多起源和多死因方法。使用扩展的竞争风险生存模型,它旨在显示(1)成年移民(G1),儿童移民(G1.5)和至少有一个移民父母在瑞典出生的移民子女(G2)的全因死亡率与祖先瑞典人的差异,以及(2)导致这些差异的死亡原因。就全因死亡率而言,大多数G1(不包括芬兰人或撒哈拉以南非洲人)在死亡率方面具有优势。这与G1.5和G2(尤其是男性)死亡率的近乎系统性逆转形成鲜明对比,后者是由过多的事故和伤害、自杀、药物使用和其他外因死亡率驱动的。鉴于外部死亡原因是可以预防和避免的,研究结果提出了有关融合进程、移民人口在瑞典面临的不平等程度以及最终移民的遗产是否积极的问题。该研究的优势包括使用高质量的数据和先进的方法,估计的粒度,以及提供的证据突出了很少研究的G1.5的不稳定死亡率情况。补充信息:在线版本包含补充资料,可在10.1007/s10680-022-09637-0获得。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: European Journal of Population addresses a broad public of researchers, policy makers and others concerned with population processes and their consequences. Its aim is to improve understanding of population phenomena by giving priority to work that contributes to the development of theory and method, and that spans the boundaries between demography and such disciplines as sociology, anthropology, economics, geography, history, political science, epidemiology and other sciences contributing to public health. The Journal is open to authors from all over the world, and its articles cover European and non-European countries (specifically including developing countries) alike.
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