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reproductive health status, knowledge, and access to health care among female migrants in shanghai, china

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 July 2004

wang feng
Affiliation:
department of sociology, university of california, irvine, usa
ping ren
Affiliation:
department of sociology, university of california, irvine, usa
zhan shaokang
Affiliation:
department of health statistics, school of public health, shanghai medical university, shanghai, china
shen anan
Affiliation:
institute of population & development studies, shanghai academy of social sciences, shanghai, china

Abstract

as the largest labour flow in human history, the recent rise in migration in china has opened up unprecedented opportunities for millions of chinese to rearrange their lives. at the same time, this process has also posed great challenges to chinese migrants, especially female migrants, who not only face a bias against ‘outsiders’ but also have a greater need for reproductive health-related services in their migratory destinations. based on data collected via multiple sources in shanghai, china’s largest metropolis, this study profiles the changing characteristics of female migrants, presents data on self-reported symptoms of reproductive health-related problems and knowledge on reproductive health issues, compares maternal and child health measures between migrants and local residents, and examines factors related to reproductive health knowledge and migrants’ access to health care in urban china. results of this study show a relatively low level of self-reported reproductive health problems among female migrants, coupled with a relatively high level of ignorance in knowledge related to std. both self-reported health status and knowledge of reproductive health are related to migrants’ educational attainment and length of stay in the urban destination. this study also finds ample evidence that female migrants’ access to urban health care is limited by a number of institutional barriers.

Type
regular articles
Copyright
© 2004 cambridge university press

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