Publication | Closed Access
An exploration of somatization among Asian refugees and immigrants in primary care.
131
Citations
29
References
1985
Year
Human MigrationEthnicityFamily MedicineGlobal MigrationEducationSocial Determinants Of HealthRefugee StatusPrimary CareCultural DiversityMedical AnthropologyPublic HealthMigration PolicyRefugee StudiesVulnerable Patient PopulationClinical RecordsMigration (Educational Migration)Manifested Illness BehaviorCultureAsian RefugeesGlobal HealthSociologyMass ImmigrationMigrant WorkerRefugee HealthHealth DisparityRefugee MovementImmigrant Health
The clinical records of Chinese, Filipino, Vietnamese, Laotian, and Mien patients in primary care were reviewed to determine the prevalence of somatization, its associated patient characteristics, and the manifested illness behavior. Patients in this study were generally poor, unemployed, and spoke little English. Somatization accounted for 35 per cent of illness visits. These visits were also more costly. Refugees had a higher rate of somatization (42.7 per cent) than immigrants (27.1 per cent). Although sociodemographic characteristics did not strongly differentiate patients with somatization from others, ethnicity and indicators of decreased resources such as large households with low income, households headed by single women, or a limited English proficiency were associated with somatization in certain ethnic groups. Somatization is thus an important health problem among Asian refugees and immigrants.
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