Hostile attitudes toward immigrants and refugees are associated with poor self-rated health. Analysis of 21 European countries

Last Updated: July 13, 2022By

Pinillos-Franco, S., & Kawachi, I. (2022). Hostile attitudes toward immigrants and refugees are associated with poor self-rated health. Analysis of 21 European countries. Social Science & Medicine, 301, 114969.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114969

Resumen:

Background
Previous studies found that individuals who harbor hostile attitudes toward immigrants & refugees tend to vote for far right nationalist parties, and that the same individuals also tend to report worse health status. We sought to test these associations using the latest data from 21 EU countries, and also whether the associations were moderated by the share of unemployed people in each region and individuals’ labor situation.
Methods
We analyzed the second release of the 2016 European Social Survey which includes different questions about attitudes toward immigrants and refugees, as well as a rich variety of socioeconomic variables. Multilevel Poisson regression models were developed, regressing fair/poor health on attitudes towards immigrants & refugees.
Results
For each one point increase in favorable attitudes toward immigrants, the prevalence of fair/poor health was reduced by 2 percentage points (PR = 0.98; 95%CI: 0.96–0.99). In analyses incorporating cross-level interactions, the association was not moderated by high background unemployment rates or individual labor market attachment.
Conclusion
Positive attitudes toward immigrants are correlated with lower prevalence of fair/poor health in general, regardless of individuals’ labor situation and the objective economic situation. Fostering empathy toward immigrants and refugees may thus promote a healthier society, especially among more prejudiced individuals.

 

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