2008
DOI: 10.1177/003335490812300211
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Health Status and Access to Health Care of Migrant Workers in China

Abstract: SYNOPSISObjectives. We explored living and working conditions, health status, and health-care access in Chinese rural-to-urban migrants and compared them with permanent rural and urban residents. Methods.A questionnaire was administered to 1,958 urban workers, 1,909 rural workers, and 4,452 migrant workers in Zhejiang Province, Eastern China, in 2004. Blood samples for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and syphilis were taken from the migrant and urban workers.Results. Migrants were young, worked very long ho… Show more

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Cited by 186 publications
(157 citation statements)
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“…A few studies using small-scale data find that health insurance improves equity in healthcare access and eases the OOP financial burden. For instance, Liu et al Few studies have examined how health insurance affects rural migrants, a subpopulation faced with lower immunization rates, higher infectious disease rates, more occupational health problems, higher maternal mortality rates, and higher healthcare cost (Barber and Yao, 2010;Herd et al, 2010;Hesketh et al, 2008;Hu et al, 2008;Zhang et al, 2010). Due to the hukou system, China's household registration system which ties certain local social welfare benefits to the place of hukou registration (usually the place of birth), migrants often do not have access to subsidized local healthcare at the place where they work and live.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A few studies using small-scale data find that health insurance improves equity in healthcare access and eases the OOP financial burden. For instance, Liu et al Few studies have examined how health insurance affects rural migrants, a subpopulation faced with lower immunization rates, higher infectious disease rates, more occupational health problems, higher maternal mortality rates, and higher healthcare cost (Barber and Yao, 2010;Herd et al, 2010;Hesketh et al, 2008;Hu et al, 2008;Zhang et al, 2010). Due to the hukou system, China's household registration system which ties certain local social welfare benefits to the place of hukou registration (usually the place of birth), migrants often do not have access to subsidized local healthcare at the place where they work and live.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Postmigration public health impacts include the consequences of ill health when newly arriving migrants experience isolation, social exclusion, and/or poverty. 62 In situations in which migrant communities' access to health or social services is limited, post-arrival susceptibilities may increase, manifested by the expression of a more severe or advanced disease. 63 Programs and strategies designed to promote and improve the health of migrants and mobile populations vary between nations.…”
Section: 56mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It imposes control over all Chinese media and prevents people from expressing opinions about the Party's policy failures that could generate public distrust of the government (Lorentzen, Chapter 1 Rural-Urban Migrant Workers and Their Denied Rights 2014). Instead of addressing the causes of social disadvantage and policy failure, China's response has often been additional censorship and repression of the policy realities (Hesketh, Jun, Lu & Mei, 2008). Through direct probing into the experiences of rural citizens who are also urban workers, this project reports the perceptions of a group whose points and rights are typically unrecognised and neglected.…”
Section: Rationale and Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…China's migrants work under high risk of occupational injury and disease, and they cannot easily access treatment when they have health problems (Fitzgerald, Chen, Qu, & Sheff, 2013;Hesketh, Jun, Lu, & Mei, 2008). They tend to work the longest hours of all Chinese workers-often over 60…”
Section: Life Expectancy and Pension Benefitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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