International Journal for Equity in Health, 22(1), 1–17
Abstract
Background The rate of international migration for the primary purpose of employment has increased exponentially in recent decades. A significant proportion of this global movement takes place across East and Southeast Asia as workers move on a temporary basis from lower-middle-income home countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam to high-income host destinations including Hong Kong and Singapore. Relatively little is known about the unique and long-term health needs of this heterogeneous group of people. This systematic review presents an analysis of recent research into the experiences and perceptions of health of temporary migrant workers in the East and Southeast Asian regions.
Methods Five electronic databases CINAHL Complete (via EbscoHost), EMBASE (including Medline), PsycINFO (via ProQuest), PubMed and Web of Science, were systematically searched for qualitative or mixed methods, peer-reviewed literature published in print or online between January 2010 and December 2020. Quality of the studies was assessed using the Critical Appraisal Checklist for Qualitative Research published by the Joanna Briggs Institute. Findings from the included articles were extracted and synthesised using qualitative thematic analysis.
Results Eight articles were included in the review. Findings from this review indicate that multiple dimensions of workers’ health is impacted by the processes of temporary migration. In addition, the research reviewed indicated that migrant workers used various strategies and mechanisms to attempt to address their health-related issues and to take better care of themselves. Such agentic practices could help them manage and maintain their health and wellbeing across physical, psychological and spiritual dimensions within the structural constraints of their employment.
Conclusions Limited published research has focused on the health perceptions and needs of temporary migrant workers in East and Southeast Asia. The studies included in this review focused on female migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong, Singapore, and the Philippines. These studies provide valuable insights but do not reflect the heterogeneity of migrants moving within these regions. The findings of this systematic review highlight that temporary migrant workers experience high and sustained levels of stress and are exposed to certain health risks which may compromise long-term health outcomes. These workers demonstrate knowledge and skills in managing their own health. This suggests that strength-based approaches to health promotion interventions may be effective in optimising their health over time. These findings are relevant to policy makers and non-government organisations supporting migrant workers.
Works citing this publication
- Assessing the Social and Economic Challenges and Opportunities of International Migrant Domestic Workers Through Review Analysis
- Employability of International Students' Partners in Kajaani, Finland: Challenges and Coping Strategies
- Making sense of breast cancer and migration
- Training as corridor governance: TVET alignment, skills recognition, and status continuity in the Myanmar–Malaysia labour migration system
- 'What would happen if I die in a foreign country?': Cancer-related personal uncertainty and its implications for health equity among Indonesian migrant domestic …
- Adverse health outcomes among migrant workers and transnational families in the Asia–Pacific: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Barriers to health access among Filipinos in Spain: results from interviews with immigrants
- Belonging on Hold: Indonesian Temporary Migrants’ Everyday Politics in Australia
- EDUKASI DAN MITIGASI KEKERASAN PEKERJA MIGRANT MUSLIM DIHONGKONG
- Mental Health Assistance in Improving Parents' Psychological Wellbeing for Indonesia Immigrants in Malaysia
- Navigating migration and cancer in Asia: A narrative analysis of stories told by Filipino migrant domestic workers with breast cancer
- Relevance of nationality for the analysis of the accident rate in the Spanish construction industry
- Self-surveillance practices of factory women migrant workers receiving SRH interventions in Malaysia: The effects of salience, gendered subjectivity and universalism
- Working abroad: Stressors and coping strategies of low-skilled migrant workers
- 'I Can Only Do My Best and Leave the Rest to God”: Religious/Spiritual Coping Strategies of African Nurses in the UK: Religious/Spiritual Coping Strategies of African …
- “We need to go back home (to) the Philippines healthy”: an interpretive phenomenological analysis of migrant domestic workers' experiences of having breast cancer …