The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review

The health and well-being of transnational migrant domestic workers (MDWs) is a pressing but largely neglected public health concern. The Asia Pacific region is home to over 20% of the global MDW population. Living and working conditions, social contexts, political environments, and migration regime...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chan, Jamie, Dominguez, Georgia, Hua, Antonia, Garabiles, Melissa, Latkin, Carl A., Hall, Brian J.
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12658
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: De La Salle University
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-14565
record_format eprints
spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-145652024-07-01T08:14:49Z The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review Chan, Jamie Dominguez, Georgia Hua, Antonia Garabiles, Melissa Latkin, Carl A. Hall, Brian J. The health and well-being of transnational migrant domestic workers (MDWs) is a pressing but largely neglected public health concern. The Asia Pacific region is home to over 20% of the global MDW population. Living and working conditions, social contexts, political environments, and migration regimes are recognized as consequential to the health of this population, but currently no synthesis of available literature to prioritize research or policy agenda setting for MDW has yet been conducted. This scoping review screened 6,006 peer reviewed articles and 1,217 gray literature sources, identifying 173 articles and 276 gray literature sources that reported key MDW health outcomes, social determinants of health, and related interventions. The majority of identified studies were observational and focused on the prevalence of common mental disorders and chronic physical conditions, with most studies lacking population representativeness. Identified social determinants of health were primarily concerned with personal social and financial resources, and health knowledge and behaviors, poor living and working conditions, community resources, experienced stigma and discrimination, poor healthcare access, exploitation within the MDW employment industry, and weak governance. Six interventional studies were identified that targeted individual level health determinants such as financial and health knowledge with mixed effectiveness. Future population representative epidemiological and respondent driven sampling studies are needed to estimate population health burdens. In addition, randomized control trials and public health intervention studies are needed to improve women’s health outcomes and address proximal health determinants to reduce health inequalities. Leveraging social networks and community facing non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are promising directions to overcome access to care for this population. 2024-03-27T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12658 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Household employees—Health and hygiene— Pacific Area Well-being Household employees—Pacific Area—Social conditions Social and Behavioral Sciences
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Household employees—Health and hygiene— Pacific Area
Well-being
Household employees—Pacific Area—Social conditions
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Household employees—Health and hygiene— Pacific Area
Well-being
Household employees—Pacific Area—Social conditions
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Chan, Jamie
Dominguez, Georgia
Hua, Antonia
Garabiles, Melissa
Latkin, Carl A.
Hall, Brian J.
The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review
description The health and well-being of transnational migrant domestic workers (MDWs) is a pressing but largely neglected public health concern. The Asia Pacific region is home to over 20% of the global MDW population. Living and working conditions, social contexts, political environments, and migration regimes are recognized as consequential to the health of this population, but currently no synthesis of available literature to prioritize research or policy agenda setting for MDW has yet been conducted. This scoping review screened 6,006 peer reviewed articles and 1,217 gray literature sources, identifying 173 articles and 276 gray literature sources that reported key MDW health outcomes, social determinants of health, and related interventions. The majority of identified studies were observational and focused on the prevalence of common mental disorders and chronic physical conditions, with most studies lacking population representativeness. Identified social determinants of health were primarily concerned with personal social and financial resources, and health knowledge and behaviors, poor living and working conditions, community resources, experienced stigma and discrimination, poor healthcare access, exploitation within the MDW employment industry, and weak governance. Six interventional studies were identified that targeted individual level health determinants such as financial and health knowledge with mixed effectiveness. Future population representative epidemiological and respondent driven sampling studies are needed to estimate population health burdens. In addition, randomized control trials and public health intervention studies are needed to improve women’s health outcomes and address proximal health determinants to reduce health inequalities. Leveraging social networks and community facing non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are promising directions to overcome access to care for this population.
format text
author Chan, Jamie
Dominguez, Georgia
Hua, Antonia
Garabiles, Melissa
Latkin, Carl A.
Hall, Brian J.
author_facet Chan, Jamie
Dominguez, Georgia
Hua, Antonia
Garabiles, Melissa
Latkin, Carl A.
Hall, Brian J.
author_sort Chan, Jamie
title The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review
title_short The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review
title_full The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review
title_fullStr The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review
title_full_unstemmed The social determinants of migrant domestic worker (MDW) health and well-being in the Western Pacific Region: A scoping review
title_sort social determinants of migrant domestic worker (mdw) health and well-being in the western pacific region: a scoping review
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2024
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12658
_version_ 1806061238668492800