Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.

BACKGROUND:Immigrants from low- and middle-income countries who have settled in high-income countries show higher risks of depression in comparison with host populations. The risks are associated with adverse social conditions. Indecisive results have been reported on the depression risks of the off...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Karien Stronks, Aydın Şekercan, Marieke Snijder, Anja Lok, Arnoud P Verhoeff, Anton E Kunst, Henrike Galenkamp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234006
id doaj-c698c4748b4a48f69866b6fd55600dfc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c698c4748b4a48f69866b6fd55600dfc2021-03-03T21:50:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023400610.1371/journal.pone.0234006Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.Karien StronksAydın ŞekercanMarieke SnijderAnja LokArnoud P VerhoeffAnton E KunstHenrike GalenkampBACKGROUND:Immigrants from low- and middle-income countries who have settled in high-income countries show higher risks of depression in comparison with host populations. The risks are associated with adverse social conditions. Indecisive results have been reported on the depression risks of the offspring of immigrant populations. OBJECTIVE:To assess the prevalence of depressed mood in immigrant offspring relative to the host population and to analyse whether that risk is explained by social conditions. METHODS:Cross-sectional data from the Dutch HELIUS study were analysed, involving 19,904 men and women of Dutch, South-Asian Surinamese, African Surinamese, Turkish or Moroccan ethnic descent aged 18 to 70. Depressive symptomatology was assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). Indicators of social conditions were socioeconomic position (educational level, occupational level, employment status), perceived ethnic discrimination and sociocultural integration (ethnic identity, cultural orientation, social network). We used logistic regression to assess the risk of depressed mood (PHQ-9 sum score ≥10) in immigrants' offspring, as well as in first generation immigrants, relative to the risk in the host population. Social indicators were stepwise added to the model. RESULTS:The prevalence of depressed mood was 13% to 20% among immigrant offspring, with the lowest level for those of African Surinamese descent; prevalence in the Dutch origin population was 7%. Relative risk of depressed mood, expressed as average marginal effects (AMEs), decreased substantially in all offspring groups after adjustment for socioeconomic indicators and discrimination. E.g. the AME of Turkish vs. Dutch decreased from 0.11 (0.08-0.13) to 0.05 (0.03-0.08). Patterns resembled those in first generation immigrants. CONCLUSIONS:Results suggest that the observed higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring will decline to the level of the host population as the various populations grow closer in terms of socioeconomic position and as immigrant offspring cease to experience discrimination.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234006
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karien Stronks
Aydın Şekercan
Marieke Snijder
Anja Lok
Arnoud P Verhoeff
Anton E Kunst
Henrike Galenkamp
spellingShingle Karien Stronks
Aydın Şekercan
Marieke Snijder
Anja Lok
Arnoud P Verhoeff
Anton E Kunst
Henrike Galenkamp
Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Karien Stronks
Aydın Şekercan
Marieke Snijder
Anja Lok
Arnoud P Verhoeff
Anton E Kunst
Henrike Galenkamp
author_sort Karien Stronks
title Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.
title_short Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.
title_full Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.
title_fullStr Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.
title_full_unstemmed Higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: The HELIUS study.
title_sort higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring reflects their social conditions in the host country: the helius study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description BACKGROUND:Immigrants from low- and middle-income countries who have settled in high-income countries show higher risks of depression in comparison with host populations. The risks are associated with adverse social conditions. Indecisive results have been reported on the depression risks of the offspring of immigrant populations. OBJECTIVE:To assess the prevalence of depressed mood in immigrant offspring relative to the host population and to analyse whether that risk is explained by social conditions. METHODS:Cross-sectional data from the Dutch HELIUS study were analysed, involving 19,904 men and women of Dutch, South-Asian Surinamese, African Surinamese, Turkish or Moroccan ethnic descent aged 18 to 70. Depressive symptomatology was assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). Indicators of social conditions were socioeconomic position (educational level, occupational level, employment status), perceived ethnic discrimination and sociocultural integration (ethnic identity, cultural orientation, social network). We used logistic regression to assess the risk of depressed mood (PHQ-9 sum score ≥10) in immigrants' offspring, as well as in first generation immigrants, relative to the risk in the host population. Social indicators were stepwise added to the model. RESULTS:The prevalence of depressed mood was 13% to 20% among immigrant offspring, with the lowest level for those of African Surinamese descent; prevalence in the Dutch origin population was 7%. Relative risk of depressed mood, expressed as average marginal effects (AMEs), decreased substantially in all offspring groups after adjustment for socioeconomic indicators and discrimination. E.g. the AME of Turkish vs. Dutch decreased from 0.11 (0.08-0.13) to 0.05 (0.03-0.08). Patterns resembled those in first generation immigrants. CONCLUSIONS:Results suggest that the observed higher prevalence of depressed mood in immigrants' offspring will decline to the level of the host population as the various populations grow closer in terms of socioeconomic position and as immigrant offspring cease to experience discrimination.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234006
work_keys_str_mv AT karienstronks higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
AT aydınsekercan higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
AT mariekesnijder higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
AT anjalok higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
AT arnoudpverhoeff higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
AT antonekunst higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
AT henrikegalenkamp higherprevalenceofdepressedmoodinimmigrantsoffspringreflectstheirsocialconditionsinthehostcountrytheheliusstudy
_version_ 1714814839106306048