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New National Approaches to Immigrant Health Assessment

New National Approaches to Immigrant Health Assessment. M. DesMeules, J. Gold, B. Vissandjée , J. Payne, A. Kazanjian , D. Manuel Health Canada, University of Montréal, University of British Columbia, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Studies. Supported by Health Canada and the

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New National Approaches to Immigrant Health Assessment

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  1. New National Approaches to Immigrant Health Assessment M. DesMeules, J. Gold, B. Vissandjée, J. Payne, A. Kazanjian, D. Manuel Health Canada, University of Montréal, University of British Columbia, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Studies Supported by Health Canada and the Canadian Population Health Initiative (CIHI)

  2. I. Background The Immigrant Population in Canada: • Is large and growing (~17% in 1996, ~18% in 2001) • Is diverse - e.g. immigrants land in Canada under different programs, from various countries of origin, etc. • Has unique socio-demographic characteristics • Has changing demographics over time (e.g., recent immigrants are from Asia vs. Europe)

  3. Immigrants in the Context of Population Health • Research shows that Immigrants are generally healthy in Canada. However: • Specific knowledge on their health (for example by subgroups of immigrants)- especially long term health and chronic disease outcomes - is limited and • Information on their utilization of health services is lacking. Disparities in health determinants, health status, and health services utilization may exist between Immigrant and Canadian-born populations, and between subgroups of Immigrants

  4. Immigrant Health Assessment and Surveillance Purpose: • To describe the patterns of health status and health outcomes of immigrants in the broader context of determinants of health and health services utilization. • To monitor trends over time • To identify potential health risks and or health disparities among immigrants • To inform immigrant health policies and programs

  5. II. Areas of ResearchImmigrant Health Initiatives National and provincial collaborators: • Health Canada, CPHI/CIHI, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, academic experts, Statistics Canada, provinces. Goal: • Through health assessment and surveillance, produce policy-relevant information on the health outcomes and health service utilization of immigrants. Objective: • To examine patterns of mortality, cancer incidence, hospitalizations, physician visits, medication use and socio-demographic factors among immigrants and subgroups of immigrants using secondary data.

  6. Immigrant Health Initiatives1st Phase: Health Outcomes • Record linkages were used to obtain health data on immigrants • 20% (369,972) of landed immigrants from 1980-90 • Mortality and cancer incidence outcomes over 19-years (until 1998) were examined • Examine health differentials among socio-demographic sub-populations

  7. Immigrant Health Initiatives2nd Phase: Health Services • Immigration data on immigrants from largest receiving provinces (BC, ON, and Que.) were linked to physician and drug claims, and hospital records • Analysis will focus, in particular, on chronic diseases, mental health, injury, and preventive services utilization • Currently at the final record linkage stage

  8. III. Key Health Issues Highlights of Main Findings Mortality Cancer Incidence Determinants of health Partial/Preliminary Results Health Services Utilization

  9. Healthy Migrant Effect SMR estimates for 1980-98 • The healthy migrant effect is seen for “all- cause mortality” and leading causes of death in Canada (cancer, CVD and accidents) • Is less pronounced for infectious diseases Imm. = immigrant non-refugees, Ref. = refugees, SMR= standardised mortality ratio CVD=Cardio-vascular disease

  10. Specific Health Outcomes SMR estimates for 1980-98 • Immigrants have elevated mortality for certain diseases • Some sub-populations are at higher risk of stroke, diabetes, AIDS mortality * Imm. = immigrant non-refugees, Ref. = refugees, SMR = standardised mortality ratio *AIDS mortality risk is elevated for females

  11. Cancer Outcomes SMR estimates for 1980-98 • Immigrants have a higher mortality risk for certain cancers (stomach, liver) • Naso-pharyngeal cancer is also elevated Imm. = immigrant non-refugees, Ref. = refugees, SMR = standardised mortality ratio

  12. Health by Type of Immigrant and Region of Origin All-cause ASMR for 1980-98 • Although a healthy migrant effect is present for immigrants from most regions of the world, mortality rates vary by sub-population IM = immigrant males, IF = immigrant females, RM= refugee males RM= refugee females, ASMR = age standardised mortality rate

  13. Determinants of Health Region of origin: • e.g., female non-refugees from the Caribbean present an elevated mortality risk for Cervical cancer (SMR=2.4) Marital status: • For example, non-refugees who are previously married present an elevated overall mortality risk, compared to those who land married (RR=1.5) Education: • Immigrants with elementary school of less education present an elevated mortality risk, compared to those who land with higher education (RR >=1.22) SMR = standardised mortality ratio RR = relative risk

  14. Immigrant Health over Time All-Cause ASMR for 1980-98 • The healthy migrant effect decreases over time in Canada • Is still present after 10+ years in Canada. IM = immigrant males, IF = immigrant females, RM= refugee males, RM= refugee females , ASMR = age standardised mortality rate

  15. Physician Visits (in 1995/96)-BC Pilot RR: Physician visits Rate ratios adjusted for age, compared to general BC population

  16. Time between landing (>=1992) and first physician billing claim for ON immigrant First physician billing claim, ON

  17. IV.Directions for Research and Policy Research needs – Methodology considerations Policy needs - beyond infectious diseases

  18. New Approaches to Immigrant Health Assessment • Record linkages optimize available data on immigrant health • Provide essential migration data on immigrant sub-populations, e.g., on geographical region of origin, type of immigrant, etc • Provide capacity for longitudinal / followup studies. • Do not rely on self-report for health outcomes and health services or active participation of respondents

  19. Future Research • Expand on sub-population health and health care utilization assessment • Examine longer term outcomes and study more systematically the reasons for health deterioration over time. • Consider other key determinants of health at the individual (eg health behaviours) and community (eg. availability of special health services for immigrants) levels.

  20. Future Policy • Expand provincial and national health and health care policies to address long term health outcomes and non-communicable conditions / chronic disease among immigrant populations • Expand policies aimed at social determinants of health

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