Aging Abroad: Do Eastern Europeans Experience the Healthy Immigrant Effect?
Adriana Scanteianu

TL;DR
This study examines whether Eastern European migrants in Western Europe and Israel experience worse health outcomes than other migrants and native populations as they age.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into health disparities among aging Eastern European migrants, highlighting their unique challenges compared to other migrant groups.
Findings
Eastern European migrants show significant health disadvantages compared to other migrants and native populations.
Disparities include differences in mental health, disability, and chronic disease prevalence.
The findings suggest a need for tailored health and social support policies for Eastern European migrants.
Abstract
As the European continent continues to undergo population aging, there is a growing number of migrants who are also aging alongside the native population. Immigrants occupy a unique socioeconomic position and often face health risks and care access issues that are poorly understood, yet critical to informing policy and facilitating healthy aging. In particular, post-Communist Eastern European migration has received little attention in the public health literature despite constituting a sizable immigrant population in Western Europe and Israel. Furthermore, existing literature points to Eastern Europeans as potentially presenting an exception to the “healthy immigrant effect,” whereby immigrants usually experience healthier and longer lives than native-born populations despite often having relatively lower socioeconomic status and lacking institutional support. Using data from the Survey…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigration, Health and Trauma · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies · Health disparities and outcomes
