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Migration process of Venezuelan women to Brazil: living conditions and use of health services in Manaus and Boa Vista, 2018–2021

Migration process of Venezuelan women to Brazil: living conditions and use of health services in Manaus and Boa Vista, 2018–2021
Migration process of Venezuelan women to Brazil: living conditions and use of health services in Manaus and Boa Vista, 2018–2021

Background: the last decade saw the emergence of a new significant migration corridor due to the mass migration of Venezuelans to neighboring countries in South America. Since 2018, Brazil became the third host country of Venezuelan displaced populations. Little is known about how migratory processes affect needs, access to social programs, and public health services of migrant women. The goal of this study is to shed light on the socio-economic profile, living conditions, and use of health services of Venezuelan migrant women in two main reception cities in Brazil.

Methods: a survey was conducted using respondent-driven sampling (RDS) in the cities of Boa Vista (Roraima), and Manaus (Amazonas). The study included 2012 Venezuelan migrant women aged between 15 and 49 years old who migrated from Venezuela to Brazil between 2018 and 2021. Relative prevalence was calculated, and the χ 2 test was used to analyse the homogeneity of proportions. All analyses considered the complex sampling.

Results: the main reasons for migrating relate to difficulties obtaining food (54%) and accessing health services (37.8%) in their country of origin. They were young and mixed race (65.7%) and had high school education (69.9%). In Manaus, 3.7% of the interviewees declared that they had no family income in the last month, while in Boa Vista, it was higher (66.2%) (p-value < 0.001). Almost one-third of them sought health care in the last 15 days, and 95% of them received care. The residents of Boa Vista arrived more recently and family income and access to paid work improved with time of residence in Brazil.

Conclusions: given the increasing flow of Venezuelan migrants crossing to Brazil, a reception system was established for the provision of food, shelter, access to health services, and income transfer programs to migrants. This was the case despite high unemployment and poverty levels and income inequality, particularly in the city of Boa Vista. However, the majority had legal migrant status and had access to the public and universal healthcare system in Brazil (SUS). The use of the SUS was similar in both cities, acting as a buffer for the differences in opportunities offered.

Brazil, Migrants, Social determinants of health, Venezuela, Women’s health
1471-2458
do Carmo Leal, Maria
9b2dc847-8d2a-42e5-891f-df14d1b0c5b4
de Carvalho, Thaiza Dutra Gomes
b1954fd0-bf11-48f1-bccb-c71d577645d6
Santos, Yammê Ramos Portella
950c5584-1dcd-4232-a349-9c9ab762bb7d
de Queiroz, Rita Suely Bacuri
f41ab797-69b9-423b-917f-111b29f3a15b
Fonseca, Paula Andrea Morelli
14be6e57-49e3-416e-aff1-9861d47762ba
Szwarcwald, Celia Landmann
08ac407b-7efd-4b3d-877d-b4968ddd5e64
Riggirozzi, Pía
ed3be4f8-37e7-46a2-8242-f6495d727c22
et al.
do Carmo Leal, Maria
9b2dc847-8d2a-42e5-891f-df14d1b0c5b4
de Carvalho, Thaiza Dutra Gomes
b1954fd0-bf11-48f1-bccb-c71d577645d6
Santos, Yammê Ramos Portella
950c5584-1dcd-4232-a349-9c9ab762bb7d
de Queiroz, Rita Suely Bacuri
f41ab797-69b9-423b-917f-111b29f3a15b
Fonseca, Paula Andrea Morelli
14be6e57-49e3-416e-aff1-9861d47762ba
Szwarcwald, Celia Landmann
08ac407b-7efd-4b3d-877d-b4968ddd5e64
Riggirozzi, Pía
ed3be4f8-37e7-46a2-8242-f6495d727c22

do Carmo Leal, Maria, de Carvalho, Thaiza Dutra Gomes and Santos, Yammê Ramos Portella , et al. (2024) Migration process of Venezuelan women to Brazil: living conditions and use of health services in Manaus and Boa Vista, 2018–2021. BMC Public Health, 24 (1), [1051]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-024-18109-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the last decade saw the emergence of a new significant migration corridor due to the mass migration of Venezuelans to neighboring countries in South America. Since 2018, Brazil became the third host country of Venezuelan displaced populations. Little is known about how migratory processes affect needs, access to social programs, and public health services of migrant women. The goal of this study is to shed light on the socio-economic profile, living conditions, and use of health services of Venezuelan migrant women in two main reception cities in Brazil.

Methods: a survey was conducted using respondent-driven sampling (RDS) in the cities of Boa Vista (Roraima), and Manaus (Amazonas). The study included 2012 Venezuelan migrant women aged between 15 and 49 years old who migrated from Venezuela to Brazil between 2018 and 2021. Relative prevalence was calculated, and the χ 2 test was used to analyse the homogeneity of proportions. All analyses considered the complex sampling.

Results: the main reasons for migrating relate to difficulties obtaining food (54%) and accessing health services (37.8%) in their country of origin. They were young and mixed race (65.7%) and had high school education (69.9%). In Manaus, 3.7% of the interviewees declared that they had no family income in the last month, while in Boa Vista, it was higher (66.2%) (p-value < 0.001). Almost one-third of them sought health care in the last 15 days, and 95% of them received care. The residents of Boa Vista arrived more recently and family income and access to paid work improved with time of residence in Brazil.

Conclusions: given the increasing flow of Venezuelan migrants crossing to Brazil, a reception system was established for the provision of food, shelter, access to health services, and income transfer programs to migrants. This was the case despite high unemployment and poverty levels and income inequality, particularly in the city of Boa Vista. However, the majority had legal migrant status and had access to the public and universal healthcare system in Brazil (SUS). The use of the SUS was similar in both cities, acting as a buffer for the differences in opportunities offered.

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Accepted/In Press date: 14 February 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 April 2024
Keywords: Brazil, Migrants, Social determinants of health, Venezuela, Women’s health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489472
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489472
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: 9b8f331c-9d15-44ef-a8aa-3de31b92db6c
ORCID for Pía Riggirozzi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5809-890X

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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2024 16:30
Last modified: 15 May 2024 01:43

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Contributors

Author: Maria do Carmo Leal
Author: Thaiza Dutra Gomes de Carvalho
Author: Yammê Ramos Portella Santos
Author: Rita Suely Bacuri de Queiroz
Author: Paula Andrea Morelli Fonseca
Author: Celia Landmann Szwarcwald
Author: Pía Riggirozzi ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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