The Healthy migrant effect on depression: variation over time?

Authors

  • Zheng Wu Department of Sociology, University of Victoria, Victoria British Columbia
  • Christoph M. Schimmele

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25336/P6DW3T

Abstract

Growing international evidence supports the epidemiological paradox that immigrants have better overall health than non-immigrants, including lower levels of depression. But whether length of residence in the host population modifies this effect on depression is not well understood. We examine a large, heterogeneous sample of Canadians to investigate three possible trajectories of depression within the immigrant population. We present hypotheses testing if the depression rate among immigrants improves, deteriorates, or undergoes nonlinear change over time. Our results confirm the so-called “healthy migrant effect” and show that visible minority immigrants are especially healthy. However, soon after arrival in Canada, depression among immigrants increases for several decades. Policy implications of the findings are discussed.

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Published

2005-12-31

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Section

Articles