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Summary All Lecture Notes - Demography and Epidemiology of Ageing and Migration in the EU (EPH2021)

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Notes from all 12 lectures of this *new* course (Sep – Oct 2021) ** Cleanly organised & easy to follow! ** Topics included: Demography in the EU; Migration in the EU, Past and Current Developments; Epidemiological Research Designs & Measures of Association; Ageing, Health, SES and the EU; Bias in Epidemiological Research; Impact of Migration on Health in the EU; Quality of Measurements & Screening Tests; Reproductive and Child Health in the EU; Judging Causality Based on Epidemiological Research Findings; Population Screening including Wilson Jungner Criteria; EU Policies Around Ageing, Migration, and Public Health; and Example of Result of EU Policies Around Ageing ** Make sure to “Follow” for future course content! Please rate, comment and message with feedback to improve future resources!

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October 19, 2021
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October 22, 2021
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Lecture 1: Demography in the EU (Christel van Gool)
Demography:

• Seeking explanations for the patterns of variation in a population and causes of
changes
• Projecting future changes and analysing future consequences
Sources of data:

• Genealogies
• Cemetery data
• Church records
• Military records
• Censuses
• Population registers (more modern day)
Topics of study:

• Population size and distribution
• Mortality and morbidity
• Fertility and contraception
• Mobility and migration

• Population composition – age, gender, race, ethnicity
• Population characteristics – education, economic status, marital and family status,
living patterns
Demographic transition: A decrease of death rates followed by a period of a strong
decrease in birth rates

,Epidemiologic transition: Dominance of infectious diseases → Dominance of chronic
diseases
Both are related!


Life expectancy in the Netherlands has doubled in 150 years (1850 to 2000s) from 40yrs to
80+yrs. This is thanks to better hygiene (epidemics/pandemics), better nutrition
(quality/famine), and to a lesser extent interventions (antibiotics/vaccines)


The 4 stages of Epidemiologic transition:




We have seen a shift in mortality causes from infectious diseases and famine (18 th century)
to non-infectious diseases such as CVD and cancer (20th century). People live longer but not
necessarily healthier, just the types of morbidity has changed.


Future demographic trends:

• Population stabilisation in 2100
• 97% of future population growth occurs in Africa and Asia
• Birth rates in Europe below replacement level
• Ageing populations
• Migration (war, famine, and climate) → within Europe and to Europe
• Rapid urbanisation

,Did COVID-19 cause a baby boom? In Netherlands and Germany yes, but not in
France/Italy/Spain. Why? There is more income uncertainty in these countries and less
fertility treatments due to reduced hospital access during a pandemic.

, Lecture 2: Migration in the EU; Past and Current Developments (Dr.
Alena Kamenshchikova)
What is migration?

• A movement of people from one administrative territory to another
• External/internal
• Primarily driven by search for better opportunities (work/health/education/lifestyle)
and preferred lifestyle elsewhere
In history

• Colonialism in the 16th century
• Industrialisation (and subsequent urbanisation) from the 18th century
• World Wars: transformation of western Europe
• Decolonisation ending large-scale European emigration and European settlers
emigrating from Asia & Africa
• Recent decades: increased immigration to Europe



• 1960s: Turkey and Morocco immigrants to Western and Southern Europe
• 1989: Fall of Berlin Wall and immigration of Eastern Europeans to West for work
• Since 2000s: Immigration from Latin America and Asia to Europe
Terminology

• Migrants
• Expats
• Refugees
• Asylum seekers (still requesting refugee status not granted yet)
Migration terminology

• UN Definition: “An international migrant who changes his or her place of usual
residence for at least one year is defined as a long-term migrant”
• Less than 1 year but more than 3 months is a short-term migrant
• Less than 3 months is a traveller/tourist
• UN Definition: “A refugee is someone who is unable or unwilling to return to their
country or origin owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of
race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political
opinion”
Why do people migrate?

• Push & Pull factors
o Social (education, family)
o Economic (employment opportunities, accessibility of products/housing)

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European Public Health, Maastricht University

Bringing you success in the Bachelor of European Public Health at Maastricht University! Summaries of all Lectures and Tutorial readings for different courses, plus plenty of FREE resources to reduce stress and help you get ahead. Bundles are available for many courses to give you all the required material at a discount. Write a message if you are looking for something that is not available. Don't forget to follow and leave a review or feedback!

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