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Ethnic German Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union: Mortality from External Causes and Cancers

by Catherine Kyobutungi (Author)
©2008 Thesis XIV, 129 Pages
Series: Challenges in Public Health, Volume 53

Summary

The aim of this work was to describe the mortality experience of ethnic German immigrants from the former Soviet Union in Germany. This study compares the mortality rates from cancers and unnatural causes, in a representative cohort of these immigrants, with the rates of the native German population. It was postulated that the former would have higher mortality from external causes, lung cancer, stomach cancer, but lower mortality from breast and prostate cancers based on what has been observed from other migrant studies. Surprisingly, the immigrants had lower overall mortality. They had lower mortality from all cancers, higher mortality from lung cancer and lower mortality from cancers of the reproductive system. Male immigrants had higher mortality from all unnatural causes, especially suicide. The immigrants had a mortality advantage that decreased over time, in contrast to the trend among native Germans.

Details

Pages
XIV, 129
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631565636
Language
English
Keywords
Russlanddeutsche Aussiedler Sterbeziffer Migration Epidemiology Biostatistics Cohort Suicide Lung cancer Krebs (Medizin)
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. XIV, 129 pp., num. graphs

Biographical notes

Catherine Kyobutungi (Author)

The Author: Catherine Kyobutungi is an epidemiologist with interest in research on the effects of inter- and intra-national migration on health. She also worked on the epidemiology of chronic diseases in developing countries and the effect of contextual factors on their development. The author works at the African Population and Health Research Centre in Kenya.

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Title: Ethnic German Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union: Mortality from External Causes and Cancers