Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations

The Finnish Migrant Health and Wellbeing Study (Maamu) is the first large-scale population-based health examination survey among the foreign-born population in Finland, unique also at the European level. It provides information on wellbeing of three major foreign-born groups: Russian, Somali, and K...

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Main Authors: Anu Castaneda, Shadia Rask, Tommi Härkänen, Teppo Juntunen, Natalia Skogberg, Mulki Mölsä, Hanna Tolonen, Seppo Koskinen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Population Research Institute of Väestöliitto 2019-09-01
Series:Finnish Yearbook of Population Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/fypr/article/view/74048
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spelling doaj-61602603f0c44391ab39e6909b1ee23f2020-11-25T01:55:17ZengPopulation Research Institute of VäestöliittoFinnish Yearbook of Population Research1796-61831796-61912019-09-015310.23979/fypr.74048Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born PopulationsAnu CastanedaShadia RaskTommi HärkänenTeppo JuntunenNatalia SkogbergMulki MölsäHanna TolonenSeppo Koskinen The Finnish Migrant Health and Wellbeing Study (Maamu) is the first large-scale population-based health examination survey among the foreign-born population in Finland, unique also at the European level. It provides information on wellbeing of three major foreign-born groups: Russian, Somali, and Kurdish. In data collection, extra effort was put into reaching the sampled persons (n=3,000), for example by recruiting bilingual personnel to carry out the data collection, reaching participation rates as high as 70%, 51%, and 63%, respectively. A comparison group of the general population was available from a general population survey. The main challenges in fieldwork included reaching sampled persons, supervision of the fieldwork personnel, and special linguistic or cultural needs. Our experiences show that participation rate can be improved by engaging the target groups in all stages of the survey process and using several recruitment strategies, ending up with succeeding in pointing out health inequalities in the population. https://journal.fi/fypr/article/view/74048MigrantHealth surveyWellbeingPopulation-basedParticipationMaamu
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anu Castaneda
Shadia Rask
Tommi Härkänen
Teppo Juntunen
Natalia Skogberg
Mulki Mölsä
Hanna Tolonen
Seppo Koskinen
spellingShingle Anu Castaneda
Shadia Rask
Tommi Härkänen
Teppo Juntunen
Natalia Skogberg
Mulki Mölsä
Hanna Tolonen
Seppo Koskinen
Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations
Finnish Yearbook of Population Research
Migrant
Health survey
Wellbeing
Population-based
Participation
Maamu
author_facet Anu Castaneda
Shadia Rask
Tommi Härkänen
Teppo Juntunen
Natalia Skogberg
Mulki Mölsä
Hanna Tolonen
Seppo Koskinen
author_sort Anu Castaneda
title Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations
title_short Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations
title_full Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations
title_fullStr Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing Survey Participation among Foreign-Born Populations
title_sort enhancing survey participation among foreign-born populations
publisher Population Research Institute of Väestöliitto
series Finnish Yearbook of Population Research
issn 1796-6183
1796-6191
publishDate 2019-09-01
description The Finnish Migrant Health and Wellbeing Study (Maamu) is the first large-scale population-based health examination survey among the foreign-born population in Finland, unique also at the European level. It provides information on wellbeing of three major foreign-born groups: Russian, Somali, and Kurdish. In data collection, extra effort was put into reaching the sampled persons (n=3,000), for example by recruiting bilingual personnel to carry out the data collection, reaching participation rates as high as 70%, 51%, and 63%, respectively. A comparison group of the general population was available from a general population survey. The main challenges in fieldwork included reaching sampled persons, supervision of the fieldwork personnel, and special linguistic or cultural needs. Our experiences show that participation rate can be improved by engaging the target groups in all stages of the survey process and using several recruitment strategies, ending up with succeeding in pointing out health inequalities in the population.
topic Migrant
Health survey
Wellbeing
Population-based
Participation
Maamu
url https://journal.fi/fypr/article/view/74048
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