Long Sickness absence differences between natives and immigrant workers: The role of differences in self-reported health
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Postprint version of published article. original available at www.springerlink.com
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Date
2013-05-05Metadata
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Original version
Brekke, I. & Schøne, P. (2013). Long Sickness absence differences between natives and immigrant workers: The role of differences in self-reported health. Journal of International Migration and Integration, doi:10.1007/s12134-013-0276-6Abstract
The limited empirical evidence on sickness absence among immigrants indicates that non-Western immigrants have a higher incidence of sickness-related absence than natives. The purpose of this article is to examine whether health is a contributing factor to the immigrant-native sickness absence gap. The present article makes use of two data sources: register data (FD-trygd) with labour market and longterm sickness absence information linked to a cross-section questionnaire survey on health: The Oslo Health Study, which was conducted in 2000–2001 (N=14,114). The findings in this article show that non-Western immigrants have a higher incidence of long-term sickness absence than natives. For both women and men, the differences in long-term sickness absence between non-Western immigrants and natives can be explained by poorer self-reported health among immigrants