Associations between urbanisation and components of the health-risk transition in Thailand. A descriptive study of 87,000 Thai adults
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Authors
Lim, Lynette
Kjellstrom, Tord
Khamman, Suwanee
Dixon, Jane
Banwell, Cathy
Seubsman, Sam-ang
Sleigh, Adrian
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Co-Action Publishing
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Social and environmental changes have accompanied the ongoing rapid urbanisation in a
number of countries during recent decades. Understanding of its role in the health-risk transition is important
for health policy development at national and local level. Thailand is one country facing many of the health
challenges of urbanisation.
OBJECTIVE: To identify potential associations between individual migration between rural and urban areas and
exposure to specific social, economic, environmental and behavioural health determinants.
DESIGN: Baseline data from a cohort of 87,134 Thai open university students surveyed in 2005 (mean age
31 years). Four urbanisation status groups were defined according to self-reported location of residence
(rural: R or urban: U) in 2005 and when the respondent was 10 12 years old (yo).
RESULTS: Fourty-four percent were living in rural areas in 2005 and when they were 10 12yo (Group RR:
ruralites); 20% always lived in urban areas (UU: urbanites); 32% moved from rural to urban areas (RU:
urbanisers); 4% moved in the other direction (UR: de-urbanisers). The ruralites and urbanites often were the
two extremes, with the urbanisers maintaining some of the determinants patterns from ruralites and the deurbanisers
maintaining patterns from urbanites. There was a strong relationship between urbanisation status,
from RR to RU to UR to UU, and personal income, availability of modern home appliances, car ownership,
consumption of ‘junk food’ and physical inactivity. Urbanisers reported worse socio-environmental
conditions and worse working conditions than the other groups. De-urbanisers had the highest rates of
smoking and drinking.
CONCLUSIONS: An urbanisation measure derived from self-reported location of residence gave new insights into
the health risk exposures of migrants relative to permanent rural and permanent urban dwellers. Living in
urban areas is an important upstream determinant of health in Thailand and urbanisation is a key element of
the Thai health-risk transition.
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Global Health Action 2009
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Global Health Action
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