Ethnic differences in self‐assessed health in Scotland: The role of socio‐economic status and migrant generation

This study investigates ethnic differences in self‐assessed health in Scotland and their determinants, focusing on socio‐economic status and migrant generations. We use the Scottish Health and Ethnicity Linkage Study (SHELS) and apply regression analysis to data for 4.6 million people. The analysis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Population space and place 2022-04, Vol.28 (3), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Cézard, Geneviève, Finney, Nissa, Kulu, Hill, Marshall, Alan
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creator Cézard, Geneviève
Finney, Nissa
Kulu, Hill
Marshall, Alan
description This study investigates ethnic differences in self‐assessed health in Scotland and their determinants, focusing on socio‐economic status and migrant generations. We use the Scottish Health and Ethnicity Linkage Study (SHELS) and apply regression analysis to data for 4.6 million people. The analysis shows that the White British, Other White and Chinese groups reported better health than the White Scottish population, whereas Pakistani and Indian populations had worse health outcomes. For the latter two groups, this contrasts with previous findings of mortality advantage and thus highlights a morbidity–mortality paradox in these South Asian populations. Our findings imply that socio‐economic deprivation, health selection and acculturation explain health inequalities for some ethnic groups, but for other groups, especially those of Pakistani origin, other mechanisms deserve further exploration.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Acculturation
Asian cultural groups
Cultural differences
Deprivation
descendants
Ethnic groups
Ethnicity
Health disparities
immigrants
Inequality
Migrants
Morbidity
Mortality
Racial differences
Scotland
self‐assessed health
socio‐economic status
title Ethnic differences in self‐assessed health in Scotland: The role of socio‐economic status and migrant generation
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