Associations of Migration, Socioeconomic Position and Social Relations With Depressive Symptoms – Analyses of the German National Cohort Baseline Data

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Associations of Migration, Socioeconomic Position and Social Relations With Depressive Symptoms – Analyses of the German National Cohort Baseline Data. / Vonneilich, Nico; Becher, Heiko; Bohn, Barbara; Brandes, Berit; Castell, Stefanie; Deckert, Andreas; Dragano, Nico; Franzke, Claus-Werner; Führer, Arnand; Gastell, Sylvia; Greiser, Halina; Keil, Thomas; Klett-Tammen, Carolina; Koch-Gallenkamp, Lena; Krist, Lilian; Leitzmann, Michael; Meinke-Franze, Claudia; Mikolajczyk, Rafael; Moreno Velasquez, Ilais; Obi, Nadia; Peters, Annette; Pischon, Tobias; Reuter, Marvin; Schikowski, Tamara; Schmidt, Börge; Schulze, Matthias; Sergeev, Dmitry; Stang, Andreas; Völzke, Henry; Wiessner, Christian; Zeeb, Hajo; Lüdecke, Daniel; von dem Knesebeck, Olaf .

In: INT J PUBLIC HEALTH, Vol. 68, 18.07.2023, p. 1606097.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Vonneilich, N, Becher, H, Bohn, B, Brandes, B, Castell, S, Deckert, A, Dragano, N, Franzke, C-W, Führer, A, Gastell, S, Greiser, H, Keil, T, Klett-Tammen, C, Koch-Gallenkamp, L, Krist, L, Leitzmann, M, Meinke-Franze, C, Mikolajczyk, R, Moreno Velasquez, I, Obi, N, Peters, A, Pischon, T, Reuter, M, Schikowski, T, Schmidt, B, Schulze, M, Sergeev, D, Stang, A, Völzke, H, Wiessner, C, Zeeb, H, Lüdecke, D & von dem Knesebeck, O 2023, 'Associations of Migration, Socioeconomic Position and Social Relations With Depressive Symptoms – Analyses of the German National Cohort Baseline Data', INT J PUBLIC HEALTH, vol. 68, pp. 1606097. https://doi.org/10.3389/ijph.2023.1606097

APA

Vonneilich, N., Becher, H., Bohn, B., Brandes, B., Castell, S., Deckert, A., Dragano, N., Franzke, C-W., Führer, A., Gastell, S., Greiser, H., Keil, T., Klett-Tammen, C., Koch-Gallenkamp, L., Krist, L., Leitzmann, M., Meinke-Franze, C., Mikolajczyk, R., Moreno Velasquez, I., ... von dem Knesebeck, O. (2023). Associations of Migration, Socioeconomic Position and Social Relations With Depressive Symptoms – Analyses of the German National Cohort Baseline Data. INT J PUBLIC HEALTH, 68, 1606097. https://doi.org/10.3389/ijph.2023.1606097

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{0b78124ecf3c42d2b748e7d5fd07276f,
title = "Associations of Migration, Socioeconomic Position and Social Relations With Depressive Symptoms – Analyses of the German National Cohort Baseline Data",
abstract = "Objectives: We analyze whether the prevalence of depressive symptoms differs among various migrant and non-migrant populations in Germany and to what extent these differences can be attributed to socioeconomic position (SEP) and social relations.Methods: The German National Cohort health study (NAKO) is a prospective multicenter cohort study (N = 204,878). Migration background (assessed based on citizenship and country of birth of both participant and parents) was used as independent variable, age, sex, Social Network Index, the availability of emotional support, SEP (relative income position and educational status) and employment status were introduced as covariates and depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) as dependent variable in logistic regression models.Results: Increased odds ratios of depressive symptoms were found in all migrant subgroups compared to non-migrants and varied regarding regions of origins. Elevated odds ratios decreased when SEP and social relations were included. Attenuations varied across migrant subgroups.Conclusion: The gap in depressive symptoms can partly be attributed to SEP and social relations, with variations between migrant subgroups. The integration paradox is likely to contribute to the explanation of the results. Future studies need to consider heterogeneity among migrant subgroups whenever possible.",
author = "Nico Vonneilich and Heiko Becher and Barbara Bohn and Berit Brandes and Stefanie Castell and Andreas Deckert and Nico Dragano and Claus-Werner Franzke and Arnand F{\"u}hrer and Sylvia Gastell and Halina Greiser and Thomas Keil and Carolina Klett-Tammen and Lena Koch-Gallenkamp and Lilian Krist and Michael Leitzmann and Claudia Meinke-Franze and Rafael Mikolajczyk and {Moreno Velasquez}, Ilais and Nadia Obi and Annette Peters and Tobias Pischon and Marvin Reuter and Tamara Schikowski and B{\"o}rge Schmidt and Matthias Schulze and Dmitry Sergeev and Andreas Stang and Henry V{\"o}lzke and Christian Wiessner and Hajo Zeeb and Daniel L{\"u}decke and {von dem Knesebeck}, Olaf",
year = "2023",
month = jul,
day = "18",
doi = "10.3389/ijph.2023.1606097",
language = "English",
volume = "68",
pages = "1606097",
journal = "INT J PUBLIC HEALTH",
issn = "1661-8556",
publisher = "Birkhauser Verlag Basel",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Associations of Migration, Socioeconomic Position and Social Relations With Depressive Symptoms – Analyses of the German National Cohort Baseline Data

AU - Vonneilich, Nico

AU - Becher, Heiko

AU - Bohn, Barbara

AU - Brandes, Berit

AU - Castell, Stefanie

AU - Deckert, Andreas

AU - Dragano, Nico

AU - Franzke, Claus-Werner

AU - Führer, Arnand

AU - Gastell, Sylvia

AU - Greiser, Halina

AU - Keil, Thomas

AU - Klett-Tammen, Carolina

AU - Koch-Gallenkamp, Lena

AU - Krist, Lilian

AU - Leitzmann, Michael

AU - Meinke-Franze, Claudia

AU - Mikolajczyk, Rafael

AU - Moreno Velasquez, Ilais

AU - Obi, Nadia

AU - Peters, Annette

AU - Pischon, Tobias

AU - Reuter, Marvin

AU - Schikowski, Tamara

AU - Schmidt, Börge

AU - Schulze, Matthias

AU - Sergeev, Dmitry

AU - Stang, Andreas

AU - Völzke, Henry

AU - Wiessner, Christian

AU - Zeeb, Hajo

AU - Lüdecke, Daniel

AU - von dem Knesebeck, Olaf

PY - 2023/7/18

Y1 - 2023/7/18

N2 - Objectives: We analyze whether the prevalence of depressive symptoms differs among various migrant and non-migrant populations in Germany and to what extent these differences can be attributed to socioeconomic position (SEP) and social relations.Methods: The German National Cohort health study (NAKO) is a prospective multicenter cohort study (N = 204,878). Migration background (assessed based on citizenship and country of birth of both participant and parents) was used as independent variable, age, sex, Social Network Index, the availability of emotional support, SEP (relative income position and educational status) and employment status were introduced as covariates and depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) as dependent variable in logistic regression models.Results: Increased odds ratios of depressive symptoms were found in all migrant subgroups compared to non-migrants and varied regarding regions of origins. Elevated odds ratios decreased when SEP and social relations were included. Attenuations varied across migrant subgroups.Conclusion: The gap in depressive symptoms can partly be attributed to SEP and social relations, with variations between migrant subgroups. The integration paradox is likely to contribute to the explanation of the results. Future studies need to consider heterogeneity among migrant subgroups whenever possible.

AB - Objectives: We analyze whether the prevalence of depressive symptoms differs among various migrant and non-migrant populations in Germany and to what extent these differences can be attributed to socioeconomic position (SEP) and social relations.Methods: The German National Cohort health study (NAKO) is a prospective multicenter cohort study (N = 204,878). Migration background (assessed based on citizenship and country of birth of both participant and parents) was used as independent variable, age, sex, Social Network Index, the availability of emotional support, SEP (relative income position and educational status) and employment status were introduced as covariates and depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) as dependent variable in logistic regression models.Results: Increased odds ratios of depressive symptoms were found in all migrant subgroups compared to non-migrants and varied regarding regions of origins. Elevated odds ratios decreased when SEP and social relations were included. Attenuations varied across migrant subgroups.Conclusion: The gap in depressive symptoms can partly be attributed to SEP and social relations, with variations between migrant subgroups. The integration paradox is likely to contribute to the explanation of the results. Future studies need to consider heterogeneity among migrant subgroups whenever possible.

U2 - 10.3389/ijph.2023.1606097

DO - 10.3389/ijph.2023.1606097

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 68

SP - 1606097

JO - INT J PUBLIC HEALTH

JF - INT J PUBLIC HEALTH

SN - 1661-8556

ER -