The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand

An increasing number of parents are migrating to seek jobs elsewhere while leaving young children in the care of others, and little is known about the consequences for children. This study examines the impact of parental out-migration on the physical health of children left behind. Data for this pap...

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Main Authors: Adhikari, Ramesh, Aree Jampaklay, อารี จำปากลาย, Aphichat Chamratrithirong, อภิชาติ จำรัสฤทธิรงค์, Richter, Kerry, Umaporn Pattaravanich, อุมาภรณ์ ภัทรวาณิชย์
Other Authors: Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/2921
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Institution: Mahidol University
Language: English
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spelling th-mahidol.29212023-04-12T15:34:10Z The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand Adhikari, Ramesh Aree Jampaklay อารี จำปากลาย Aphichat Chamratrithirong อภิชาติ จำรัสฤทธิรงค์ Richter, Kerry Umaporn Pattaravanich อุมาภรณ์ ภัทรวาณิชย์ Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research Parental migration Children living separately Child health Open Access article Journal of Population and Social Studies วารสารประชากรและสังคม An increasing number of parents are migrating to seek jobs elsewhere while leaving young children in the care of others, and little is known about the consequences for children. This study examines the impact of parental out-migration on the physical health of children left behind. Data for this paper were taken from the 2007 survey of migration and health from Kanchanaburi, Thailand. A total of 11,241 children who have both parents were included in the survey. The study found that 14.5% of children had either one or both migrant parents. Overall, 25.5% of all children had an illness during the month prior to the survey. Analysis reveals that having one migrant parent was independently associated with a higher likelihood of an illness (odds ratio of mother migrant children = 1.37; odds ratio of father migrant children =1.23) than those with no parents or both parents migrating. The findings suggest that strategies to alleviate the negative impact of parental migration as well as to maintain and enhance the well-being of families, especially of the children left behind are warranted. 2014-07-03T08:00:44Z 2017-10-25T08:10:23Z 2014-07-03T08:00:44Z 2017-10-25T08:10:23Z 2014-07-04 2012-01 Article Journal of Population and Social Studies. Vol.20, No.2 (2012), 20-37 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/2921 eng Mahidol University application/pdf
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
language English
topic Parental migration
Children living separately
Child health
Open Access article
Journal of Population and Social Studies
วารสารประชากรและสังคม
spellingShingle Parental migration
Children living separately
Child health
Open Access article
Journal of Population and Social Studies
วารสารประชากรและสังคม
Adhikari, Ramesh
Aree Jampaklay
อารี จำปากลาย
Aphichat Chamratrithirong
อภิชาติ จำรัสฤทธิรงค์
Richter, Kerry
Umaporn Pattaravanich
อุมาภรณ์ ภัทรวาณิชย์
The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand
description An increasing number of parents are migrating to seek jobs elsewhere while leaving young children in the care of others, and little is known about the consequences for children. This study examines the impact of parental out-migration on the physical health of children left behind. Data for this paper were taken from the 2007 survey of migration and health from Kanchanaburi, Thailand. A total of 11,241 children who have both parents were included in the survey. The study found that 14.5% of children had either one or both migrant parents. Overall, 25.5% of all children had an illness during the month prior to the survey. Analysis reveals that having one migrant parent was independently associated with a higher likelihood of an illness (odds ratio of mother migrant children = 1.37; odds ratio of father migrant children =1.23) than those with no parents or both parents migrating. The findings suggest that strategies to alleviate the negative impact of parental migration as well as to maintain and enhance the well-being of families, especially of the children left behind are warranted.
author2 Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research
author_facet Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research
Adhikari, Ramesh
Aree Jampaklay
อารี จำปากลาย
Aphichat Chamratrithirong
อภิชาติ จำรัสฤทธิรงค์
Richter, Kerry
Umaporn Pattaravanich
อุมาภรณ์ ภัทรวาณิชย์
format Article
author Adhikari, Ramesh
Aree Jampaklay
อารี จำปากลาย
Aphichat Chamratrithirong
อภิชาติ จำรัสฤทธิรงค์
Richter, Kerry
Umaporn Pattaravanich
อุมาภรณ์ ภัทรวาณิชย์
author_sort Adhikari, Ramesh
title The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand
title_short The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand
title_full The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand
title_fullStr The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of Kanchanaburi, Thailand
title_sort impact of parental migration on the health of children living separately from parents: a case study of kanchanaburi, thailand
publishDate 2014
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/2921
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