200 likes | 387 Views
E N D
1. Interaction between Pre- and Post-migration Factors on Depression among New Migrants to Hong Kong from Mainland ChinaFunding source: RGC Public Policy Research Funding Scheme (HKU 7004-PPR20051). Dr. Kee-lee Chou & Prof. Nelson Chow
2. Introduction Immigration in Hong Kong
Under One Way Permit (OWP):
150 quotas for new immigrants (NI) from Mainland daily
55,000 NI annually
Over 800,000 NI (1985 2004)
= 11.7% population in 2004
= Main contributor to population growth
3. Introduction Pre- and Post Migration Factors with Depression in Refugee literature (Birman & Tran, 2008; Fenta et al., 2004; Lindencrona et al., 2008; Silove et al., 1997),
Pre-migration factor: Pre-migration preparation (Chou, 2009)
4. Introduction Moderated by social support (Chou, 2009)
Limitation 1: cross section data
Limitation 2: stayed in Hong Kong Less than six months
Limitation 3: no examination of post-migration factors
5. Objectives 1: examine the long-term effect of pre-migration planning on depressive symptoms
2: interaction effect of pre-migration with acculturation stress and quality of life on depressive symptoms
6. Method Participants:
New arrivals aged 18 or above
From Mainland on OWP
Resided in HK for 36 months
Baseline 449 respondents (Response rate = 78.9%)
One-year follow-up: 347 respondents (dropout rate = 20%)
7. Method Measures
Depressive symptomatology
Chinese version of 20-item CES-D
Preparation for migration
8 items used in Ryan et al.s study (2006)
8. Method Measures
Acculturation Stress
26-item Social, Attitudinal, Familial, and Environment (SAFE) Acculturation Stress Scale (Hovey & Magana, 2009; Wong et al., 2004)
9. Method Measures
Quality of Life
28-item Hong Kong Chinese version of the World Health Organization Quality of Life (WHOQOL) Scale Brief Version (WHOQOL, 1998; Chan et al., 2006)
10. Method Measures
Demographic variables
Sex, age, marital status, education, household income
11. Method Statistical Analyses
Descriptive statistics (Table 1)
Regression tests (Table 2)
Base model
CES-D + All independent variables
Moderating effects of Pre-migration planning with stress and quality of life
12. Results: Table 1
13. Results: Table 1
14. Results: Table 2 (a)
15. Results: Table 2 (b)
16. Results: Table 2 (c)
17. Discussion Important findings:
Poor planning predicted depressive symptoms at baseline assessment only and its direct impact disappeared after one year of stay in Hong Kong
But it has a moderating effect with two post-migration factors, namely acculturation stress and quality of life on depressive symptoms
18. Discussion Important findings:
Acculturation stress and quality of life predict depressive symptoms
Depressive symptoms dropped significantly after one year of stay in Hong Kong
19. Limitations Based upon one-year Longitudinal data: longer period of follow-up time needed
Potentially important variables may not be included: childhood traumatic experiences, social support or life events before migration.
Sample predominantly female
Measure of depression based on self-report
20. Conclusion Mental health of New Arrivals is worrying during their first year of stay in Hong Kong
Depression associated with poor migration planning, acculutration stress, and quality of life
Preventive measures needed
Pre-migration planning as effective intervening factor
21. The End