The health issues that face migrant and other mobile underserved populations are similar to those faced by the general population but are often magnified or compounded by their migratory lifestyle. Mobility results in poor continuity of care and simultaneously increases the need for care.1
Please click on each subtitle to learn more about each issue in migrant health.
Health care access
Migrants struggle with similar challenges as other underserved populations regarding access to health care, but face the additional barriers of mobility, language, and cultural differences, lack of familiarity with local health care services, and limited eligibility to publicly and privately funded health care programs. While the uninsured rate for underserved Americans has dropped since the adoption of the Affordable Care Act, anecdotal evidence indicates that many migrant workers like farmworkers are unable to afford co-pays and deductibles.
People are on the move -- but their health care might not follow. For example, someone fleeing a disaster may cross into a new county or state, which brings them out of their provider networks, reducing access and raising costs.
En-route health needs
People who are en route to a new location may encounter additional health risks such as heat or cold stress, dehydration, and exposure to disease, even when traveling within the country. Migrants are more vulnerable while on the move, which may cause increased incidences of trafficking and exploitation; please see the Trafficking tab on our Women’s Health page.
At work
Immigrant and migrant populations work in some of the riskiest industries in the country including agriculture, forestry, fishing, and construction. Immigrants have higher rates of injury and fatality compared to workers in other sectors. In fact, foreign born workers are more likely to die on the job than those born in the US. Learn more on our Environmental and Occupational Health page.
Toxic exposures
Farmworkers are exposed to pesticides in the fields. Farmworker families are also exposed. Paraoccupational exposure results from direct contact with farmworkers, such as parents or household members. Children and family members may also be exposed by pesticide applications and from pesticide drift. Toxic exposures don’t just happen to farmworkers. Migrant workers may be exposed to household and industrial cleaners, industrial manufacturing products, and other chemical exposures. Chemical exposure poses a huge range of health risks. Learn more and see some of MCN’s resources on pesticides on our Pesticides page.
Legal and regulatory concerns
There is a long history of agricultural exclusions under various laws, resulting in insufficient on-the-job protections for farmworkers. MCN has long advocated for stronger Worker Protection Standards. Workers in all industries may not know their rights or may fear acting as a “whistleblower” when their rights are violated. MCN provides information for clinicians on our Worker’s Compensation page.
Housing and sanitation
Migrant housing is associated with: pesticides exposures; unsafe drinking water; crowding; substandard and unsafe heating, cooking and electrical systems; inadequate sanitation; and dilapidated structures.2-6 Clinicians need to be aware of these additional health and well-being risks for migrant patients.
Food insecurity
It is estimated that more than half of farmworker households are food insecure.7, 10-12 Farmworkers in migrant housing may face added food insecurity due to lack of access to transportation, food storage, and cooking facilities.
Natural disasters and emergencies
Disasters and emergencies in the United States like floods, heat waves, and hurricanes disproportionately affect disadvantaged groups more than other populations. Outdoor workers like migrant farmworkers are particularly vulnerable. In recent years, outdoor workers have experience heightened health risks from extreme heat and weather, degraded air quality, and more vector-borne diseases.8 Migrants may have a higher risk of being exposed to these emergencies as a result of substandard housing (that may lack insulation and air conditioning) and outdoor work (resulting in increase in heat stress and other heat-related illnesses). They also may have fewer resources to help them adapt to the emergencies.
Clinicians serving migrants
Throughout the United States, many sites of health provision, from community clinics to health departments to the national network of health centers, are actively engaged to serve the underserved populations in their communities. Today, Migrant Clinicians Network serves over 10,000 constituents -- nurses, physicians, nurse practitioners, outreach workers, promotores de salud, administrators, pharmacists, dieticians, radiologists and many other types of clinicians dedicated to health justice for the migrant, immigrant, and asylum-seeking communities.
Explore Issues
Explore Migrant Health Issues
Migrant Clinicians Network provides overviews on the following issues in migrant health:
References
Kugel C, Zuroweste E. The state of health care services for mobile poor populations: history, current status, and future challenges. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2010;21(2):421–429.
Holden C, George L, Smith A. No refuge from the fields: Findings from a survey of farmworker housing conditions in the United States. Housing Assistance Council. 2001. Available at: http://www.ncfh.org/?plugin=ecomm&content=item&sku=5732 . Accessed on April 19, 2011.
Government Accounting Office. Pesticides: improvements needed to ensure the safety of farmworkers and their children; 2000. http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/search/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED439899&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=no&accno=ED439899 . Accessed on April 15, 2011.
Quandt SA, Arcury TA, Rao P, et al. Agricultural and residential pesticides in wipe samples from farmworker family residences in North Carolina and Virginia. Environ Health Perspect. 2004;112(3):382–387.
Early J, Davis SW, Quandt SA, Rao P, Snively BM, Arcury TA. Housing characteristics of farmworker families in North Carolina. J Immigr Minor Health. 2006;8(2):173–184.
Gentry AL, Grzywacz JG, Quandt SA, Davis SW, Arcury TA. Housing quality among North Carolina farmworker families. J Agric Saf Health. 2007;13(3):323–337.
Quandt SA, Arcury TA, Early J, Tapia J, Davis JD. Household food security among migrant and seasonal latino farmworkers in North Carolina. Public Health Rep. 2004;119:568–576.8 Schulte PA, Chun H. Climate change and occupational safety and health: establishing a preliminary framework. J Occup Environ Hyg. 2009;6(9):542-54.
2013 Health Center Data. HRSA Health Center Program. http://bphc.hrsa.gov/uds/datacenter.aspx?fd=mh . Accessed June 25, 2015.
Hill BG, Moloney AG, Mize T, Himelick T, Guest JL. Prevalence and predictors of food insecurity in migrant farmworkers in Georgia. Am J Public Health. 2011;101:831–833.
Quandt SA, Shoaf JI, Tapia J, Hernández-Pelletier M, Clark HM, Arcury TA. Experiences of Latino immigrant families in North Carolina help explain elevated levels of food insecurity and hunger. J Nutr. 2006;136:2638–2644.
Kilanowski JF, Moore LC. Farmworker children at high risk for food insecurity, inadequate diet. J Ped Nurs. 2010;25:360–366.