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Socioeconomic status and biomedical risk factors in migrants and native tuberculosis patients in Italy

[journal article]

Pittalis, Silvia
Piselli, Pierluca
Contini, Silvia
Gualano, Gina
Alma, Mario Giuseppe
Tadolini, Marina
Piccioni, Pavilio
Bocchino, Marialuisa
Matteelli, Alberto
Bonora, Stefano
Di Biagio, Antonio
Franzetti, Fabio
Carbonara, Sergio
Gori, Andrea
Sotgiu, Giovanni
Palmieri, Fabrizio
Ippolito, Giuseppe
Girardi, Enrico

Abstract

Action on social determinants is a main component of the World Health Organization End Tuberculosis (TB) Strategy. The aim of the study was to collect information on socioeconomic characteristics and biomedical risk factors in migrant TB patients in Italy and compare it with data collected among Ita... view more

Action on social determinants is a main component of the World Health Organization End Tuberculosis (TB) Strategy. The aim of the study was to collect information on socioeconomic characteristics and biomedical risk factors in migrant TB patients in Italy and compare it with data collected among Italian TB patients. A cross-sectional study was conducted among TB patients aged ≥18 years over a 12-months enrolment period in 12 major Italian hospitals. Information on education, employment, housing and income was collected, and European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions index was used to assess material deprivation. Among migrants, we also analyzed factors associated with severe material deprivation. Migrants were compared with younger (18-64 years) and older (65+ years) Italians patients. Out of 755 patients enrolled (with a median age of 42 years, interquartile range: 31-53), 65% were migrants. Pulmonary, microbiologically confirmed, and new cases were 80%, 73%, and 87% respectively. Prevalence of co-morbidities (i.e. diabetes, chronic kidney disease, neoplastic diseases and use of immunosuppressive drugs) was lower among migrants compared to Italian TB patients, while indicators of socioeconomic status, income and housing conditions were worst in migrants. Forty-six percent of migrants were severely deprived vs. 9% of Italians (p<0.0001, 11.3% and 5.5% among younger and older Italians, respectively). Among migrants, being male, older, irregular, unemployed, with a shorter time spent in Italy, a lower education level, and without a co-morbidity diagnosis were factors associated with severe material deprivation at multi-variable logistic regression. Moreover, socioeconomic indicators for Italian patients did not differ from those reported for the general Italian population, while migrant TB patients seem to have a higher prevalence of severe material deprivation than other migrants residing in Italy. Intervention to address the needs of this population are urgent.... view less

Keywords
Italy; migrant; risk; socioeconomic factors; biomedicine; native citizen; patient

Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Medical Sociology

Document language
English

Publication Year
2017

Page/Pages
p. 1-12

Journal
PLOS ONE, 12 (2017) 12

ISSN
1932-6203

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.