Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?

Studies on the health of migrants have increased considerably in number in recent years, but little is still known about the long-term health effects associated with forced migration, and particularly for people who were forced to migrate as children. Data shortcomings together with the methodologic...

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Published in:SSM - Population Health
Main Authors: Saarela, Jan M., Elo, Irma T.
Other Authors: Swedish School of Social Science Subunit
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd. 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/231990
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/231990 2024-01-07T09:44:29+01:00 Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects? Saarela, Jan M. Elo, Irma T. Swedish School of Social Science Subunit 2018-02-02T13:10:01Z 11 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/231990 eng eng Elsevier Ltd. 10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.10.012 Saarela , J M & Elo , I T 2016 , ' Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects? ' , SSM - Population Health , vol. 2 , pp. 813 - 823 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.10.012 Bibtex: urn:568302608fab27d467f9ea90661b4c68 84994735241 6ecb6658-9d02-4b9d-b912-813d4247be0e http://hdl.handle.net/10138/231990 cc_by_nc_nd openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Finland Forced migration Migration in childhood Health Mortality Long-term effects 3142 Public health care science environmental and occupational health Article publishedVersion 2018 ftunivhelsihelda 2023-12-14T00:12:03Z Studies on the health of migrants have increased considerably in number in recent years, but little is still known about the long-term health effects associated with forced migration, and particularly for people who were forced to migrate as children. Data shortcomings together with the methodological challenges of studying migrant populations limit the ability to disentangle the roles of various factors that influence migrant health outcomes. Finland provides an unusual opportunity to study long-term health consequences associated with forced migration. During World War II, twelve per cent of the Finnish population was forced to leave the region nowadays referred to as Ceded Karelia. After the war, these Karelians could not return home because the area was relinquished to the Soviet Union. Using high quality, linked register-based data for the period 1988–2012, we investigate whether this forced migration had long-term health consequences for those who were forced to migrate as children. Comparison groups are non-displaced persons born on the adjacent side of the new border, and people born elsewhere in Finland. Health at ages 43–65 years is measured by receipt of sickness benefit, which is an indicator of short-term illness, and receipt of disability pension, which reflects long-term illness or permanent disability. All-cause and cause-specific mortality is analysed at ages 43–84 years. We find no support for the hypothesis that the traumatic event of being forced to migrate during childhood has long-term negative health consequences. The forced child migrants have lower odds for receipt of sickness benefit, and women also have lower odds for receipt of disability pension. The mortality results are largely driven by patterns specific for eastern-born populations of Finland. A likely reason behind the absence of negative health consequences is that these migrants seem to have integrated well into post-war Finnish society. Peer reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper karelia* karelians HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository SSM - Population Health 2 813 823
institution Open Polar
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
topic Finland
Forced migration
Migration in childhood
Health
Mortality
Long-term effects
3142 Public health care science
environmental and occupational health
spellingShingle Finland
Forced migration
Migration in childhood
Health
Mortality
Long-term effects
3142 Public health care science
environmental and occupational health
Saarela, Jan M.
Elo, Irma T.
Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?
topic_facet Finland
Forced migration
Migration in childhood
Health
Mortality
Long-term effects
3142 Public health care science
environmental and occupational health
description Studies on the health of migrants have increased considerably in number in recent years, but little is still known about the long-term health effects associated with forced migration, and particularly for people who were forced to migrate as children. Data shortcomings together with the methodological challenges of studying migrant populations limit the ability to disentangle the roles of various factors that influence migrant health outcomes. Finland provides an unusual opportunity to study long-term health consequences associated with forced migration. During World War II, twelve per cent of the Finnish population was forced to leave the region nowadays referred to as Ceded Karelia. After the war, these Karelians could not return home because the area was relinquished to the Soviet Union. Using high quality, linked register-based data for the period 1988–2012, we investigate whether this forced migration had long-term health consequences for those who were forced to migrate as children. Comparison groups are non-displaced persons born on the adjacent side of the new border, and people born elsewhere in Finland. Health at ages 43–65 years is measured by receipt of sickness benefit, which is an indicator of short-term illness, and receipt of disability pension, which reflects long-term illness or permanent disability. All-cause and cause-specific mortality is analysed at ages 43–84 years. We find no support for the hypothesis that the traumatic event of being forced to migrate during childhood has long-term negative health consequences. The forced child migrants have lower odds for receipt of sickness benefit, and women also have lower odds for receipt of disability pension. The mortality results are largely driven by patterns specific for eastern-born populations of Finland. A likely reason behind the absence of negative health consequences is that these migrants seem to have integrated well into post-war Finnish society. Peer reviewed
author2 Swedish School of Social Science Subunit
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Saarela, Jan M.
Elo, Irma T.
author_facet Saarela, Jan M.
Elo, Irma T.
author_sort Saarela, Jan M.
title Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?
title_short Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?
title_full Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?
title_fullStr Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?
title_full_unstemmed Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects?
title_sort forced migration in childhood : are there long-term health effects?
publisher Elsevier Ltd.
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/231990
genre karelia*
karelians
genre_facet karelia*
karelians
op_relation 10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.10.012
Saarela , J M & Elo , I T 2016 , ' Forced migration in childhood : Are there long-term health effects? ' , SSM - Population Health , vol. 2 , pp. 813 - 823 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.10.012
Bibtex: urn:568302608fab27d467f9ea90661b4c68
84994735241
6ecb6658-9d02-4b9d-b912-813d4247be0e
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/231990
op_rights cc_by_nc_nd
openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
container_title SSM - Population Health
container_volume 2
container_start_page 813
op_container_end_page 823
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