首页> 外文期刊>Journal of cross-cultural psychology >Do Childhood Boarding School Experiences Predict Health, Well-Being and Disability Pension in Adults? A SAMINOR Study
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Do Childhood Boarding School Experiences Predict Health, Well-Being and Disability Pension in Adults? A SAMINOR Study

机译:童年寄宿学校经历是否预测成年人的健康,福祉和残疾养老金? 萨米尔研究

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Indigenous Sámi and Kven minority children in Norway were during the 20th century placed at boarding schools to hasten their adoption of the Norwegian majority language and culture. This is the first population-based study examining health, well-being and disability pension rates among these children. Data stem from two epidemiological studies conducted in 2003/04 (SAMINOR 1) and 2012 (SAMINOR 2) by the Centre for Sami Health Research. The SAMINOR 1 study included N ?=?13,974 residents (50.1% women, M _(age)?=?52.9?years) and n ?=?2,125 boarding participants (49.6% women, M _(age)?=?56.2?years). The SAMINOR 2 part included N ?=?10,512 residents (55.5% women, M _(age)?=?47.6?years) and n ?=?1246 boarding participants (48.7% women, M _(age)?=?54.1?years). Main outcome measures are mental and general health, well-being and disability pension linearly regressed upon the predictors. We observed minor differences between boarding and non-boarding participants that generally disfavored the former, of which many disappeared after covariate adjustment. Boarding school participants reported more discrimination, violence, unhealthier lifestyle behavior (smoking), less education and household income compared to non-boarding participants. The exceptionally long timeframe between boarding school and the current outcome measures (40–50?years) is a likely reason for the weak associations. The study supports the international literature on health inequalities and highlights the risk of ill health following boarding school placement of indigenous or minority children. On a positive note, participants reporting stronger ethnic belonging (strong Sámi identity) were well protected, and even functioned better in terms of lower disability rates than majority Norwegians.
机译:20世纪,挪威的土著萨米族和克文族儿童被安置在寄宿学校,以加快他们对挪威多数民族语言和文化的接受。这是第一项以人口为基础的研究,调查这些儿童的健康、福利和残疾养老金率。数据来源于萨米健康研究中心在2003/04年(萨米诺1号)和2012年(萨米诺2号)进行的两项流行病学研究。SAMINOR 1研究包括N?=?13974名居民(50.1%为女性,男(年龄)?=?52.9?年)和n?=?2125名寄宿参与者(49.6%为女性,男(年龄)?=?56.2?年)。SAMINOR 2部分包括N?=?10512名居民(55.5%为女性,男(年龄)?=?47.6?年)和n?=?1246名寄宿参与者(48.7%为女性,男(年龄)?=?54.1?年)。主要结果指标是心理和一般健康、幸福感和残疾养老金,这些指标与预测因素呈线性回归。我们观察到寄宿和非寄宿参与者之间的微小差异,这通常不利于前者,其中许多在协变量调整后消失。与非寄宿学校参与者相比,寄宿学校参与者报告了更多的歧视、暴力、不健康的生活方式行为(吸烟)、更少的教育和家庭收入。寄宿学校和目前的结果测量之间的时间间隔(40-50年)非常长,这很可能是这种弱关联的一个原因。该研究支持关于健康不平等的国际文献,并强调了土著或少数民族儿童在寄宿学校安置后的健康不良风险。一个积极的方面是,报告了更强烈的民族归属感(强烈的萨米人身份)的参与者得到了很好的保护,甚至在残疾率方面比多数挪威人表现得更好。

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