Lectures and seminars POSTPONED: PHSP seminar Migration in public health research - The epidemiological approach

01-04-2020 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Add to iCal
Campus Solna Meeting room "Insight" (Insikten), floor 4, Widerström building

The seminar is postponed and will instead be held during the fall of 2020.

The Doctoral Programme in Public Health Science (PHSP) welcomes all doctoral students and researchers at KI to the second seminar in our seminar series on Migration in public health research: Qualitative methods.

The focus of this seminar are the epidemiolocal methods relevant for migrant health research, focusing on aspects were migrants in a cohort is a unique possibility to study aspects not possibly to study by their means (natural experiments) but also difficulties in using epidemiological methods when studying migrants due to unmeasured confounding. 

Migration is a global, ancient, and public phenomenon and, at the same time, local, contemporary, and personal. This multifaceted nature makes the study migrant health rewarding and difficult at the same time.

Seminar leader

Anna-Clara Hollander is a clinical psychologist with a PhD at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden researching psychiatric epidemiology among migrants, including refugees in the research group Epidemiology of PsychIatric Conditions, Substance use and Social environment (EPICSS).

Anna-Clara has lived and worked in Tajikistan studying PTSD and depression after their civil war and spent time as post doc at the Division of Psychiatry, University College London. 

Registration

The seminar is postponed and will instead be held during the fall of 2020. 

To attend the seminar, or to register for online participation, please contact phsp-doctoral@ki.se by 25 March. 

Background the seminar series Migration in public health research: Qualitative methods

The UN estimates there were 258 million international migrants (people living outside their country of birth) in 2018, including 3.5 million asylum seekers and 20.4 million refugees. The largest annual migrant flows globally are people moving within state boundaries for employment, to study, or because they are forcibly displaced. The gaps in understanding the relation between migration and health remain a challenge as the effect of migration on health is complex, arising from multiple determinants.

The conditions surrounding the process of migration—pre-migration, transit, destination, and return—may determine trajectories of health. Universal health coverage remains elusive for many non-citizens, especially for asylum seekers. Health systems need to become “migration aware”—integrating migration and mobility into every level of healthcare planning. Effective policy making requires accurate data and analysis to document realities and counter misperceptions about the scale of migration and its effects.

Migration health is still in its infancy and continues to be under-researched and underfunded. Better health for migrants isn’t simply a moral imperative. It is an evidence informed, economically wise choice that will improve health for all.  

Contact

Ritva Rissanen Assistant professor