A Cross-National Perspective in Migrant Health
移民健康的跨国视角
基本信息
- 批准号:8133393
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 6.87万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2010
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2010-08-24 至 2013-07-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AcculturationAddressAdultAffectAgeAsiansBehavioralBody mass indexCharacteristicsChinaChinese PeopleChronicCountryDataData SourcesDestinationsDiabetes MellitusDominicanDominican RepublicEmigrationsExposure toFaceFilipinoFutureGenderGenerationsHealthHealth StatusHealth SurveysHeightHispanicsImmigrantImmigrationIndiaIndividualInternationalInterviewLifeLife Cycle StagesLife TablesLightLiteratureLiving StandardsMeasuresMexicanMexicoMorphologic artifactsNational Health Interview SurveyNational originNomadsOutcomePathway interactionsPatient Self-ReportPatternPersonal SatisfactionPhilippinesPopulationProcessPublic HealthRelative (related person)Risk FactorsRuthenium BenShapesSmokingSmoking StatusSocietiesSocioeconomic StatusSurveysTechniquesTestingTimeUnited StatesVariantWomanWorkWorld Healthbasecohorthealth disparityimprovedinterestmenmigrationnovelpublic health relevancesexsocialsocioeconomics
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): This study aims to shed light on health disparities among immigrant groups in the U.S. relative to health conditions in their sending countries and to contribute to our understanding of the public health implications of immigrant incorporation processes. We specifically address explanations for immigrant health selection and acculturation by comparing the health status and (cross-sectional) age-specific health trajectories of immigrant men and women from five origin nations against those of non-migrants with similar characteristics who remain in the origin society. The origin-society comparison will offer a more appropriate analytic counterfactual than that used in most existing studies, which only compare immigrants to natives or to other immigrant cohorts. A cross-national comparison will allow us to further examine the relevance of a) conditions of emigration in determining sex-specific migrant selectivity and b) the context of reception immigrants' face in destinations in influencing immigrant health trajectories. We look at five major immigrant groups where health outcomes, conditions of emigration, and contexts of reception vary conspicuously: Chinese, Dominicans, Indians, Mexicans, and Filipinos. We use nationally-representative data from both the United States and each of these five sending countries, namely National Health Interview Survey and New Immigrant Survey in the former and World Health Survey and the Survey of Global Ageing and Adult Health in the latter. We look at several health outcomes theoretically affected in different ways by acculturation and which are key risk factors of major chronic conditions, including self-reported height, body mass index (BMI) levels, and current smoking status, in addition to self-reported diabetes status. We also employ self-rated health (SRH) measures, which capture objective health, general well-being, and even acculturation to U.S. society. A combination of multivariate regression and matching techniques will allow us to focus on the health selectivity issue while minimizing health differences arising from the fact that migrants do not represent a random subset of their populations of origin. Finally, we will estimate summary measures for hypothetical groups of people across the life course (according to the timing of their migration) based on multistate life table techniques in order to compare the potential health trajectories of individuals according to their level of acculturation while keeping non-migrant trajectories as the counterfactual of interest.
PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE: This project compares several major health outcomes (height, BMI, smoking, diabetes, self-rated health) and their age-specific trajectories among immigrant adult men and women coming from five major immigrant origins (China, the Dominican Republic, India, Mexico, and the Philippines) with those prevalent among non-migrants in their respective sending countries. By comparing both the levels and trajectories of immigrants with those of non-migrants in origin, this study aims to shed light on health disparities among immigrant groups in the U.S. relative to health conditions in their sending countries and to contribute to our understanding of the public health implications of immigrant incorporation processes.
描述(由申请人提供):这项研究旨在阐明美国移民群体与其发送国健康状况之间的健康差距,并有助于我们理解移民融入过程对公共卫生的影响。我们通过比较来自五个原籍国的移民男性和女性的健康状况和(横截面)特定年龄的健康轨迹与留在原籍社会具有类似特征的非移民的健康状况和(横截面)年龄特定健康轨迹,来具体解释移民的健康选择和文化适应。与大多数现有研究中使用的只将移民与当地人或其他移民群体进行比较的研究相比,原籍与社会的比较将提供更合适的反事实分析。跨国比较将使我们能够进一步审查a)移民条件在确定特定性别的移民选择性方面的相关性,以及b)目的地接收移民的面孔在影响移民健康轨迹方面的相关性。我们观察了五个主要的移民群体,他们的健康状况、移民条件和接受情况存在显著差异:中国人、多米尼加人、印度人、墨西哥人和菲律宾人。我们使用了来自美国和这五个派遣国中每个国家的具有全国代表性的数据,即前者的国家健康访谈调查和新移民调查,后者的世界健康调查和全球老龄化和成人健康调查。我们观察了几种健康结果,这些结果理论上受到文化适应的不同影响,是主要慢性病的关键风险因素,包括自我报告的身高、身体质量指数(BMI)水平和目前的吸烟状况,以及自我报告的糖尿病状况。我们还采用自我评估健康(SRH)指标,包括目标健康、总体幸福感,甚至是对美国社会的文化适应。多变量回归和匹配技术的结合将使我们能够专注于健康选择性问题,同时最大限度地减少由于移民不代表其原籍人口的随机子集而产生的健康差异。最后,我们将基于多状态生命表技术估计假设人群在整个生命过程中(根据他们迁移的时间)的汇总测量,以便比较个人根据他们的文化适应程度的潜在健康轨迹,同时将非移民轨迹作为感兴趣的反事实。
公共卫生相关性:该项目比较了来自五个主要移民来源国(中国、多米尼加共和国、印度、墨西哥和菲律宾)的移民成年男性和女性的几个主要健康结果(身高、体重指数、吸烟、糖尿病、自评健康)及其特定年龄的轨迹,以及它们在各自发送国的非移民中普遍存在的情况。通过比较移民和非移民的水平和轨迹,本研究旨在阐明美国移民群体之间的健康差距相对于其发送国的健康状况,并有助于我们理解移民融入过程对公共卫生的影响。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
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Fernando Riosmena其他文献
Fernando Riosmena的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Fernando Riosmena', 18)}}的其他基金
Health of Aging Mexicans on Both Sides of the Border
边境两侧墨西哥老年人的健康状况
- 批准号:
10395593 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 6.87万 - 项目类别:
Health of Aging Mexicans on Both Sides of the Border
边境两侧墨西哥老年人的健康状况
- 批准号:
10560634 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 6.87万 - 项目类别:
Health of Aging Mexicans on Both Sides of the Border
边境两侧墨西哥老年人的健康状况
- 批准号:
10211638 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 6.87万 - 项目类别:
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