Migrants
tend to be healthier, live longer: study
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[December 06, 2018]
(Reuters) - Migrants tend to be healthier
than the residents of wealthy countries they travel to, such as the
United States, and often help fight diseases by becoming healthcare
workers in those nations, according to a study published on Wednesday.
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Populist arguments that migrants pose a health risk and a burden to
health systems are myths used to drive anti-immigrant sentiment, the
report published by University College London and the Lancet medical
journal concluded. https://bit.ly/2ASQyqF
The two-year study found that migrants, in general, have a greater
life expectancy than residents of host countries and were less
likely to die of illnesses such as cancer and heart disease.
They were, however, more prone to diseases such as hepatitis, HIV
and tuberculosis, but tended to spread those infections among
immigrant communities rather than the general population, the study
found.
"Our analysis suggests that migrants are healthier, migrants
contribute positively to the economies of host countries, and in
wealthy countries like the United Kingdom and United States,
migrants constitute a large portion of the health workforce," said
Ibrahim Abubakar, chair of the UCL-Lancet Commission on Migration
and Health that carried out the study.
The report, which looked at 96 studies and 5,464 mortality estimates
for more than 15 million migrants, found inconsistencies between
migrant groups.
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Mortality was lower, for instance, among migrants from east Asia and
Latin America than the general population of six European host
countries studied. However, it was higher among migrants from north
Africa and eastern Europe.
"In too many countries, the issue of migration is used to divide
societies and advance a populist agenda," Lancet Editor Richard
Horton said in a statement. "Migrants commonly contribute more to
the economy than they cost."
The results were based mainly on studies of migrant health in
wealthier countries, due to a lack of data on low-income and
middle-income countries. As a result, the study may not reflect the
health of immigrants in those poorer countries that are the most
popular destinations globally for migrants, the report cautioned.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay; Editing by Paul Tait)
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