research on working conditions and immigrant health elena ronda m.d., m.p.h., ph.d. associate...

34
Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator, Centre for Research on Occupational Health Co-Chair CIBERESP Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health June, 2015

Upload: horatio-samuel-daniels

Post on 18-Jan-2018

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Immigration is an global phenomenon One of the largest drivers for immigration is work and economic opportunity. Entry into the labour market is not easy for migrants, and they tend to occupy low-qualified, high-risk jobs, although often their education and work experience would qualify them to work in better posts with better contractual conditions (“3D jobs”: “dirty, demanding and dangerous”): health implications IMMIGRATION, WORK AND HEALTH ILO has estimated that there are million immigrants of economically active age worldwide

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health

Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D.

Associate Professor, University of Alicante

Principal Investigator, Centre for Research on Occupational Health Co-Chair CIBERESP

Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health June, 2015

Page 2: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

To introduce the relationships between migration, working and employment conditions, and health and discuss some important and practical concepts related to the challenges faced by researchers.

GOAL OF THE WORKSHOP:

Page 3: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

• Immigration is an global phenomenon• One of the largest drivers for immigration is work and economic

opportunity.• Entry into the labour market is not easy for migrants, and they tend

to occupy low-qualified, high-risk jobs, although often their education and work experience would qualify them to work in better posts with better contractual conditions (“3D jobs”: “dirty, demanding and dangerous”): health implications

IMMIGRATION, WORK AND HEALTH

ILO has estimated that there are 105.4

million immigrants of economically

active age worldwide

Page 4: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

The beginning of a project in occupational health: demographic change

• 8 million jobs were generated (2.5 million were filled by foreign workers).

• 76% of male migrants were employed in construction and services, while the large majority of women were employed in services (89%)

Page 5: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

ITSAL (Spain) Project

Articles published (1990 and 2005) (n=48)

• Most articles on occupational health in immigrant workers came from countries with a

long history of migration (Australia, Canada and the United States) (80%)

• Only 8% came from European countries (Sweden, Italy and Germany):

HIGHER RATES OF FATAL AND NON-FATAL OCCUPATIONAL INJURIES AND WORK-RELATED PROBLEMS IN MIGRANTS COMPARED TO NATIVES

Common explanations:

1. Assignment of more hazardous tasks to immigrant workers

2. Failure of employers to invest in safety training and equipment

3. Greater risk-taking by immigrant workers

4. Reluctance to complain about unsafe conditions by those with precarious jobs.

Page 6: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

1st case-study.

It is 2005.

You are in charge of designing a research project to assess the health of immigrant workers in Spain:

1. Propose the main topics that you would include

2. Think about the most appropriate design

3. Which groups of migrants would you include?

4. Which definition of migrant would you use?

10 minutes work in groups…

Page 7: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Inmigración Trabajo y Salud: ITSAL (Spain) Project

•Starting in 2005: the general objectives were to analyze employment and working conditions in immigrant workers and relationships with their health.

•Funded by the Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria. Instituto de Salud Carlos III in 2005 (PI050497,PI052202, PI052334), in 2006 (PI061701), and in 2007 (PI0790470)

Page 8: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Causal Model in Occupational Health

Living Conditions: family and social relations, housing, mobility, etc.

Working Conditions: workplaces, equipment, subtances and materials, tasks, organization.

Employment conditions: sector and occupation, wages, contract, working hours.

Politics, resources, care and preventive activities

Job Market

Social Protection

Productive Structure

Behaviours (ppe, smoking…)

WellbeinginjuriesIllnessesDisabilities

Meso(firms)

Micro(workers)

Macro(Governments)

Page 9: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Sub study 1: Secondary data analysis•Analysis of occupational injuries

Sub study 2: Qualitative study• Interview and focus groups (n=158)

Sub study 3: Epidemiologic study• Migrant workers : n= 2434• Spanish workers: n= 509

ITSAL Project (2005-2010)

Page 10: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Sub study 1: Secondary data analysis•Analysis of occupational injuries: work injuries statistics and working conditions survey

Sub study 2: Qualitative study• Interviews and focus groups (n=158)

Sub study 3: Epidemiologic study• Migrant workers : n= 2434• Spanish workers: n= 509

ITSAL Project (2005-2010)

Page 11: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,
Page 12: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

aOR: Adjusted OR by sex, age, educative level, job situation, type of contract, sector and occupation.

Adjusted OR of self-reported occupational injuries by country of origin, Spain, 2008 (n=10,927 )

1.001.12

0.93

1.21

1.651.52

2.28

1.361.19

1.66

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

Men Women

Low HDI Countries

Total

Spain

Adju

sted

OR

(95

%CI

)

Occupational injuries: injury occurring at work that was serious enough to require time off or medical care

Page 13: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Sub study 1: Secondary data analysis• Analysis of occupational injuries

Sub study 2: Qualitative study: focus groups and in-depth interviews with 158 documented/undocumented foreign-born workers from Colombia, Ecuador, Morocco, Romania and Sub-Saharan Africa

Sub study 3: Epidemiologic study• Migrant workers : n= 2434• Spanish workers: n= 509

ITSAL Project (2005-2010)

Page 14: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

ITSAL Project: Methods• Immigrant worker definition:

1. Not Spanish citizens and not married to a native Spaniard

2. Not athletes, artists, graduate students or high-level executives

3. Residing in Spain for more than 1 year

4. Worked more than 3 months in Spain (with or without a contract)

5. Level of Spanish to understand the survey or focus group

6. Born in Ecuador, Colombia, Romania and Morocco (more than 70%)

• Population sampling:• Convenience sample segmented by sex, residency (cities), country of

origin, and documentation status

• Interviewed in their meeting places (call centers, coffee shops, NGOs, employment or regularization queues (lines), town squares, etc.

Page 15: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

• Immigrant workers present greater health vulnerability than native workers, as a consequence of their economic needs, job insecurity, legal status, increased job hazards exposure, and lack of knowledge of their rights and resources.

• Immigrant women workers are a vulnerable group, especially if they work in domestic services.

• Immigrant workers experience discrimination and have little capacity to influence their working and employment conditions.

Some results from the qualitative ITSAL

Page 16: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Sub study 1: Secondary data analysis• Analysis of occupational injuries

Sub study 2: Qualitative study• Interviews and focus groups (n=158)

Sub study 3: Epidemiologic study• Based on a convenience sample using a questionnaire (74 items) of

2,434 interviewees from Colombia, Ecuador, Morocco and Romania.

• A complementary convenience sample of 509 Spanish workers between 20 and 40 years from the same cities and in neighborhoods.

ITSAL Project (2005-2010)

Page 17: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

• Complex interactions among legal status, type of contract, and time living in the country.

• The worst health outcomes were observed in documented immigrants without job contracts and living more than 3 years in Spain.

• Women immigrant workers, especially in domestic services, have the highest exposure to adverse working conditions.

• Immigrant workers show a higher risk of sickness presenteeism.

Some results from the quantitative ITSAL

Page 18: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Comparison of Sickness Presenteeism between Foreign-born and Spanish born workers by different variables

ORc IC95% ORa** IC95% ORc IC95% ORa** IC95% ORc IC95% ORa** IC95%

SexMales 1.70 1.27- 2.28 1.53 1.13- 2.07 1.65 1.22- 2.23 1.49 1.09- 2.02 2.09 1.33- 3.27 2.19 1.35- 3.53Females 1.34 0.98- 1.82 1.27 0.93- 1.75 1.31 0.96- 1.79 1.11 0.79- 1.56 1.51 0.93- 2.46 1.11 0.65- 1.91

Age (years)20-30 1.58 1.17- 2.13 1.42 1.04- 1.96 1.55 1.14- 2.09 1.37 1.00- 1.87 1.88 1.18- 2.99 2.12 1.25- 3.5931- 40 1.47 1.08- 1.99 1.41 1.03- 1.93 1.43 1.05- 1.95 1.36 0.99- 1.88 1.72 1.07- 2.75 1.36 0.82- 2.27

Educative level Without studies/Primary studies 2.08 1.32- 3.28 1.87 1.16- 3.02 2.09 1.32- 3.32 1.89 1.17- 3.08 2.01 1.07- 3.74 2.00 1.01- 3.98

Secundary 1.43 1.05- 1.94 1.32 0.96- 1.80 1.40 1.03- 1.91 1.30 0.95- 1.79 1.61 1.01- 2.57 1.48 0.92- 2.39Universitary 1.51 1.00- 2.28 1.29 0.84- 1.98 1.37 0.90- 2.08 1.14 0.74- 1.77 3.79 1.53- 9.38 2.68 0.97- 7.41

Type of contract Permanent 1.32 0.95- 1.85 1.33 0.95- 1.86 1.30 0.92- 1.83 1.22 0.85- 1.74 1.49 0.83- 2.67 1.55 0.85- 2.84Temporaty 1.49 1.06- 2.08 1.56 1.11- 2.20 1.43 1.02- 2.01 1.49 1.06- 2.11 1.90 1.14- 3.17 2.28 1.31- 3.94No contract 1.27 0.73- 2.22 1.24 0.67- 2.30 1.25 0.72- 2.20 1.26 0.67- 2.34 1.40 0.67- 2.93 0.99 0.40- 2.47

Income last 3 months*<= 750 0.89 0.53- 1.49 0.76 0.45- 1.32 0.86 0.51- 1.45 0.73 0.42- 1.77 1.10 0.54- 2.21 0.95 0.44- 2.08751- 1200 1.58 1.14- 2.20 1.52 1.09- 2.12 1.56 1.12- 2.18 1.49 1.07- 2.09 1.73 1.08- 2.79 1.77 1.06- 2.941201- 1800 1.34 0.88- 2.03 1.27 0.81- 1.97 1.22 0.80- 1.88 1.14 0.72- 1.80 2.35 1.08- 5.09 2.16 0.97- 4.83>1800 1.73 0.71- 4.20 2.45 0.81- 7.41 1.96 0.80- 4.83 2.63 0.86- 7.98 N.A N.A N.A N.A

Total 1.52 1.23- 1.88 1.40 1.13- 1.75 1.48 1.19- 1.84 1.36 1.09- 1.70 1.79 1.29- 2.49 1.77 1.25- 2.51

Foreign-born and time in Spain >= 2 years Foreign-born and time in Spain < 2 yearsVariables

Sickness presenteeism

Foreign-born

Presenteeism: “going to work in ill health or with a medical condition that would require sick leave”

Page 19: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

1. A clear and operative definition of immigrant worker must be adopted.

2. Legal status, type of contract and time in the country are key variables to explaining the association between work and health, and they must be properly collected in any survey.

3. Given difficulties accessing the immigrant population (hard-to-reach groups), convenience samples, carried out by trained (immigrant) interviewers, might be the best way to survey immigrant workers.

Some lessons from the ITSAL Project

Page 20: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

ITSAL II: From the boom to the crisis

Source: Spanish Labor Force Survey

% Wage variation (2009 - 2011)

Page 21: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Emerging research questions

• What happens with the migrants who come to Spain to work?

• How is the economic crisis affecting these workers?

Page 22: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

2nd case-study.

Based on ITSAL I, What do you think is the best approach to this new scenario?

(study design, immigrant definition, methodology etc.)

Page 23: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

ITSAL Project

Page 24: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

ITSAL Project (2012-2013)

Sub study 5: Qualitative study

• Interview and focus groups (n=158)

Sub study 6: Epidemiologic study

• Re-contact through telephone

Page 25: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Method: Study design and participants

1. Six focus groups (3 men and 3 women) n= 44 participants: Colombia, Ecuador, Morocco

2. Two semi-structured interviewers: key informant working with Romanian Associations

3. Theoretical sample design

• National group with substantial presence in Spain.

• Time of residence since 2007 minimum

• Employment status (employed and unemployed)

Page 26: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

• Decreased employment opportunities and lower salaries• Reduced health and safety measures• The most frequent health-related complaint are related to

mental health problems which impact on their physical health, leading to diffuse pain, headaches and gastric discomfort, and the practice of self-medication to cope with the situation

• Increase in presenteeism

Page 27: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

ITSAL Project (2012-2013)

Sub study 5: Qualitative study

• Interview and focus groups (n=158)

Sub study 6: Epidemiologic study

• Re-contact through telephone

Page 29: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Increased PMH among those who:

lost their employment (ORa=3,62; IC 95%: 1,64-7,96)

Increased number of working hours(ORa=2,35;IC95%:1,02-5,44)

Mensual salary decreased (ORa=13,61 IC 95%:1,49-124,35)

Continue to have irregular status (ORa=36,59; IC 95%:2,47-541,17)

Decreased PMH among those whobecame affiliated to social security (ORa=0,10; IC 95%: 0,02-0,48)

Page 30: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

3rd case-study.

1. What do you think is the best way to transfer these research results?

2. To whom should they be transferred?

Page 31: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Immigrant CBOs:

Their experience with ITSAL results and need to follow this topic

For Community-based Organizations:

Page 32: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Seminar and Policy Briefing at the Ministry of HealthMadrid, 2011

For Policy Makers:

Page 33: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

EPICOH 2011: Minisymposium on Migration and Occupational Health

For Researchers:

Page 34: Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. Associate Professor, University of Alicante Principal Investigator,

Thank you

[email protected]

For more information about the ITSAL Project: http:/www.upf.edu/cisal/