Medical needs of immigrant populations
Immigrant
populations will lead to new challenges for the NHS in future, argue
Shahid Anis Khan and Partha
Ghosh
The
world's population has doubled over the past 50
years.w1 The annual growth rate of 1.3% will result
in a further increase to about 9 billion by 2050. Nearly a third of
this growth is attributed to three countries in South Asianamely
India (21%), Pakistan (5%), and Bangladesh
(4%)which have historic, cultural, and economic ties with
the United Kingdom. According to the International Organisation for
Migration, the total number of migrants worldwide increased from 84
million in 1975 to 175 million by 2000,w2 and by 2050 it may
have reached 230
million.
MOLLY COOPER/PHOTOFUSION
Meanwhile, the global population of elderly
people is increasing. By 2050 the overall growth rate of 2.4%
per year will result in a threefold increase in the number of people
aged 60 or older to 2 billion, with eight out of every 10 elderly
people living in developing
countries.w3
Large
demographic changes will occur in Europe.w4 The current
population of the European Union of 452 million will shrink to around
400 million despite its current inward migration rate. Populations in
some European countries will decrease by a quarter while becoming
considerably older. By 2050 the proportion of elderly people is
expected to have risen from 20% to 37%, with a big impact
on Europe's economies and social
infrastructures.
These
trends in international migration and population ageing will probably
increase the influx of South Asians to the United Kingdom. Many will
bring elderly relatives with them given that, in Asian countries,
70% of elderly people live with their children. In the UK over
the past decade the ethnic minority population has grown by 53%
and now comprises 7.9% of the total population.w5
South Asians, the largest ethnic minority group, now number two and a
half million people and account for 50% of ethnic minority
groups, with another 15% of the ethnic population described as
of mixed race. Although increasing immigration may provide a welcome
solution to such shrinking and ageing among Europe's
populationsw6 it will almost certainly have a substantial
impact on health services such as the NHS, because South Asians have
higher rates of coronary heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, stroke,
hip fractures, and renal
failure.w7 w8
So
what needs to be done? The European Union must encourage managed
migration. The union needs cohesive policies for immigration and health
which can respond properly to the medical needs of the migrant
population. First, though, policy makers should assess the likely
effects of further migration on health services before enforcing big
changes in the numbers of migrants. Ill conceived and short sighted
attempts to develop services could prove to be a disastrous knee jerk
reaction.
The UK currently allows in
150 000 migrants a year. Those in charge of developing and
modernising the NHS should take account of the rapidly changing
demography of the nation, understand better the needs of ethnic
minority populations, and target health promotion at people in those
populations who are at high risk of
disease.
Basic and postgraduate
training for doctors, nurses, and professions allied to medicine must
include learning about ethnic diversity and transcultural medicine,
while academics must more widely debate and develop capacity for
clinical research in transcultural medicine.w9 Meanwhile,
royal colleges, specialist societies, voluntary organisations,
patients' groups, and community leaders could do much more to
promote and share expertise on the health of people from ethnic
minorities.
Lastly, exchange
programmes for health professionals in the UK and less developed
countries would allow dissemination and adaptation of the UK's
substantial knowledge in managing diseases of old age and chronic
diseases, as well as of health service finance and
management.
Shahid Anis Khan, consultant
physician, Elderly Care and General Medicine, Lister
Hospital, Stevenage SG1
4AB
Email: shahidak@aol.com
Partha Ghosh, consultant physician
Competing
interests: None declared.
This
article was first published in the BMJ
(2005;331:418).
studentBMJ 2005;13:309-352 September ISSN 0966-6494
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