Bozorgmehr Kayvan, Razum Oliver, Szecsenyi Joachim, Maier Werner, Stock Christian
Department of General Practice & Health Services Research, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Department of Epidemiology & International Public Health, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2017 Sep;71(9):857-862. doi: 10.1136/jech-2016-208506. Epub 2017 Jul 14.
Newly arriving asylum seekers in many European Union countries are assigned a place of residence based on administrative quota. This may have important consequences for the exposure to contextual health risks. We assessed the association between regional deprivation and the distribution of asylum seekers in Germany considered as vulnerable (women, children <7 years, persons >64 years) because of their increased health needs.
Using nationally representative data, we analysed the rates of observed to expected numbers of asylum seekers and vulnerable subgroups in Bayesian spatial models. Regional deprivation was measured by the German Index of Multiple Deprivation. The analyses were performed at the district level (N=402) and adjusted for district population size, effects of federal states as well as spatial effects.
Of the 224 993 asylum seekers, 38.7% were women, 13.8% children aged <7 years and 19.8% aged >64 years. The adjusted number of asylum seekers (totals and vulnerable subgroups) was higher in more deprived districts (Q3, Q4 and Q5) relative to districts in the lowest deprivation quintile (Q1). The adjusted rate ratios for districts with highest relative to those with lowest deprivation were 1.26 (1.03-1.53) for women, 1.28 (1.04-1.58) for children aged <7 years and 1.50 (1.08-2.08) for older asylum seekers.
The adjusted number of vulnerable asylum seekers was higher in districts with medium and highest deprivation compared with districts with lowest deprivation. The disproportionate distribution was highest for older asylum seekers and children <7 years. Vulnerable subgroups tend to be exposed to more deprived places of residence, which may further increase health risks and healthcare needs.
在许多欧盟国家,新抵达的寻求庇护者会根据行政配额被分配居住地点。这可能对接触环境健康风险产生重要影响。我们评估了德国地区贫困程度与被视为弱势群体(妇女、7岁以下儿童、64岁以上人员)的寻求庇护者分布之间的关联,因为这些群体的健康需求增加。
我们使用具有全国代表性的数据,在贝叶斯空间模型中分析了寻求庇护者及弱势群体亚组的观察值与预期值的比率。地区贫困程度通过德国多重贫困指数来衡量。分析在地区层面(N = 402)进行,并对地区人口规模、联邦州的影响以及空间效应进行了调整。
在224993名寻求庇护者中,38.7%为女性,13.8%为7岁以下儿童,19.8%为64岁以上人员。与贫困程度最低的五分位数地区(Q1)相比,贫困程度较高的地区(Q3、Q4和Q5)中,经调整后的寻求庇护者(总数及弱势群体亚组)数量更多。贫困程度最高地区与最低地区相比,女性的调整率比为1.26(1.03 - 1.53),7岁以下儿童为1.28(1.04 - 1.58),老年寻求庇护者为1.50(1.08 - 2.08)。
与贫困程度最低的地区相比,贫困程度中等和最高的地区中,弱势寻求庇护者的调整后数量更多。这种不均衡分布在老年寻求庇护者和7岁以下儿童中最为明显。弱势群体往往居住在更贫困的地区,这可能会进一步增加健康风险和医疗需求。