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@ARTICLE{Vonneilich:277911,
author = {N. Vonneilich and H. Becher and B. Bohn and B. Brandes and
S. Castell and A. Deckert and N. Dragano and C.-W. Franzke
and A. Führer and S. Gastell and H. Greiser$^*$ and T. Keil
and C. Klett-Tammen and L. Koch-Gallenkamp$^*$ and L. Krist
and M. Leitzmann and C. Meinke-Franze and R. Mikolajczyk and
I. Moreno Velasquez and N. Obi and A. Peters and T. Pischon
and M. Reuter and T. Schikowski and B. Schmidt and M.
Schulze and D. Sergeev$^*$ and A. Stang and H. Völzke and
C. Wiessner and H. Zeeb and D. Lüdecke and O. von dem
Knesebeck},
title = {{A}ssociations of {M}igration, {S}ocioeconomic {P}osition
and {S}ocial {R}elations {W}ith {D}epressive {S}ymptoms -
{A}nalyses of the {G}erman {N}ational {C}ohort {B}aseline
{D}ata.},
journal = {International journal of public health},
volume = {68},
issn = {1661-8556},
address = {[Lausanne]},
publisher = {Frontiers Media S.A.},
reportid = {DKFZ-2023-01570},
pages = {1606097},
year = {2023},
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.},
keywords = {German National Cohort (Other) / NAKO (Other) / depressive
symptoms (Other) / migrant health (Other) / migration
(Other) / social integration (Other) / social relations
(Other) / socioeconomic position (Other)},
cin = {C020 / C070},
ddc = {610},
cid = {I:(DE-He78)C020-20160331 / I:(DE-He78)C070-20160331},
pnm = {313 - Krebsrisikofaktoren und Prävention (POF4-313)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-313},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
pubmed = {pmid:37533684},
pmc = {pmc:PMC10391163},
doi = {10.3389/ijph.2023.1606097},
url = {https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/277911},
}