The “healthy immigrant” effect: does it exist in Europe today?

Authors

  • Alexander Domnich Department of Health Sciences – University of Genoa (Italy)
  • Donatella Panatto Department of Health Sciences – University of Genoa (Italy)
  • Roberto Gasparini Department of Health Sciences – University of Genoa (Italy)
  • Daniela Amicizia Department of Health Sciences – University of Genoa (Italy)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2427/7532

Keywords:

Immigration, Healthy immigrant effect, Europe

Abstract

Several studies, carried out mainly in the United States and Canada, have suggested that recent immigrants are generally healthier than native-born populations in spite of the fact that they frequently have a lower socioeconomic status and less access to healthcare services. This “epidemiological paradox” has been called the “healthy immigrant” effect and is usually attributed to a self-selection process prior to migration, “cultural buffering” and official health screening and employability in receiving countries. In this paper, we have evaluated the European scientific research into the existence of the “healthy immigrant” effect.

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Published

2024-03-15

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Section

Articles