Immigrant Families and Children's Health: The Intergenerational Health Impact of Federal and State Immigration Policy
移民家庭和儿童健康:联邦和州移民政策对代际健康的影响
基本信息
- 批准号:10271241
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 57.87万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2020
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2020-09-25 至 2024-03-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AddressAdoptedAffectAnxietyAnxiety DisordersArizonaBirth RecordsCaliforniaCaringChildChild HealthChildhoodCommunitiesComplexDataData SetDatabasesDecision MakingDocumentationEligibility DeterminationFamilyFamily health statusFrightGenerationsGeographic LocationsGoalsHealthHealth PolicyHealth Services AccessibilityHealth StatusHealthcareHospitalizationHouseholdImmigrantImmigrationIncidenceInfant HealthInformation SystemsLawsLicensingLinkLocal GovernmentMaternal HealthMeasuresMedicaidMedicalMental HealthMethodologyMothersNatural experimentOregonOutcomeOutpatientsParentsPatternPersonal SatisfactionPoliciesPopulationPopulation GroupPrenatal carePreventivePrimary Health CarePublic HealthPublic PolicyQuasi-experimentRegulationResearchResearch DesignResearch PersonnelRoleServicesShapesSideState GovernmentStatutes and LawsStressSurveysSystemTechniquesTestingTimeUnited StatesVisitVulnerable PopulationsWomanWorkplaceauthoritycost effectivefederal policyhealth care availabilityhealth care service utilizationhealth datahealth disparityhealth service usehospital utilizationimprovedinnovationintergenerationalmemberobstetric outcomesprenatalprogramsresponsesocial determinantsstress disorderstress related disorder
项目摘要
ABSTRACT
One in four children in the United States lives in an immigrant family (i.e., with at least one immigrant parent in
the household), and at least one in twenty lives in a mixed-immigration status family (i.e., variability in immigration
status). While several studies have demonstrated the importance of a family’s immigration status as a social
determinant of child health – few have analyzed the role of immigration policy (including national, state and local
immigration policies) in shaping child health outcomes. Historically, such analyses have been challenging
because of the limited availability of nationwide data sets containing the requisite measures of immigration
status, and the use of insufficiently-rigorous analytic techniques that are unable to go beyond statistical
associations. Our interdisciplinary group has shown its capacity to overcome these issues in a recent study using
state Medicaid data and innovative analytic techniques to examine the impact of immigration policy on infant,
child, and maternal health. For this proposal, our overarching goal is to extend this capacity nationwide by
using Medicaid data to assess the impact of public policy on health care access, health-service utilization, and
health outcomes for US-born children of first-generation immigrant parents. Specifically, we will fulfill the
following aims. Aim 1: we will build a national, longitudinal, linked Medicaid data set to examine the effect of
immigration policies on children’s health. Aim 2: using this national database, we will examine the impact of
national immigration policy on child health (e.g., mental health) and health care use (e.g., primary-care access,
hospital utilization). Aim 3: we will examine state and local immigration policies to determine the differential
impact of various policies on immigrant parents and their US-born children. We use eligibility requirements for
Medicaid to identify immigrant mothers and their US-born children, and then use probabilistic matching (via
household billing identification systems and birth records) to link family units. To conduct the analyses in Aims
2-3, we will use causal inference research designs (such as difference-in-difference) to explore the impact of
external public policy changes – taking advantage of “natural experiments” in policy implementation over time
and across geographic areas. This includes federal and state immigration policies (e.g., immigration laws,
regulations that include or exclude immigrants from particular services), state and local immigration actions (e.g.,
workplace-level and community-level enforcement), and federal and state health policies (e.g., federal Medicaid
legislation, regulation or guidance specific to prenatal care, pediatric care) that may differentially impact first-
generation immigrant parents and their US-born children. We hypothesize that these policies will have important
intergenerational impacts on the health and wellbeing of US-born children of immigrants. Answering these
specific aims is essential to inform decision-making by policymakers, public health leaders, and medical
professionals who are committed to addressing health disparities and improving health trajectories for children
in immigrant families, one of the most rapidly growing child population groups.
摘要
在美国,每四个孩子中就有一个生活在移民家庭(即,至少有一个移民父母在
家庭),至少有二十分之一的人生活在混合移民身份的家庭(即,移民变动
状态)。虽然有几项研究表明,家庭的移民地位作为一个社会因素的重要性,
儿童健康的决定因素-很少有人分析移民政策的作用(包括国家,州和地方
移民政策)影响儿童健康成果。从历史上看,这种分析一直具有挑战性,
由于载有必要的移民措施的全国性数据集有限,
地位,以及使用无法超越统计的严格分析技术
协会.我们的跨学科小组在最近的一项研究中显示了克服这些问题的能力,
国家医疗补助数据和创新的分析技术,以检查移民政策对婴儿的影响,
儿童和产妇保健。对于本提案,我们的总体目标是通过以下方式在全国范围内扩大这一能力:
使用医疗补助数据评估公共政策对医疗保健获取、医疗服务利用的影响,
第一代移民父母在美国出生的孩子的健康状况。具体而言,我们将履行
的目标。目标1:我们将建立一个全国性的、纵向的、关联的医疗补助数据集,以检查
儿童健康的移民政策。目标2:利用这一国家数据库,我们将研究
关于儿童健康的国家移民政策(例如,心理健康)和卫生保健使用(例如,初级保健服务,
医院使用)。目标3:我们将研究州和地方的移民政策,以确定差异
各种政策对移民父母及其在美国出生的子女的影响。我们使用资格要求
医疗补助,以确定移民母亲和他们在美国出生的孩子,然后使用概率匹配(通过
家庭帐单识别系统和出生记录),以联系家庭单位。在Aims中进行分析
2-3,我们将使用因果推理研究设计(如差异中的差异)来探索
外部公共政策变化-利用政策执行过程中的“自然实验”
跨越地理区域。这包括联邦和州的移民政策(例如,移民法,
包括或排除特定服务移民的法规),州和地方移民行动(例如,
工作场所级别和社区级别的执行),以及联邦和州的健康政策(例如,联邦医疗补助
专门针对产前护理、儿科护理的立法、法规或指导)可能首先产生不同影响-
移民父母和他们在美国出生的孩子。我们假设,这些政策将具有重要的
对美国出生的移民子女的健康和福祉的代际影响。回答这些
明确的目标对于决策者、公共卫生领导者和医疗机构的决策至关重要。
致力于解决健康差距和改善儿童健康轨迹的专业人员
在移民家庭中,这是儿童人口增长最快的群体之一。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
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会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Jens Hainmueller其他文献
Jens Hainmueller的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Jens Hainmueller', 18)}}的其他基金
Immigrant Families and Children's Health: The Intergenerational Health Impact of Federal and State Immigration Policy
移民家庭和儿童健康:联邦和州移民政策对代际健康的影响
- 批准号:
10374174 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 57.87万 - 项目类别:
Immigrant Families and Children's Health: The Intergenerational Health Impact of Federal and State Immigration Policy
移民家庭和儿童健康:联邦和州移民政策对代际健康的影响
- 批准号:
10597612 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 57.87万 - 项目类别:
Immigrant Families and Children's Health: The Intergenerational Health Impact of Federal and State Immigration Policy
移民家庭和儿童健康:联邦和州移民政策对代际健康的影响
- 批准号:
9885299 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 57.87万 - 项目类别:
Research Supplement for Immigrant Families and Children's Health
移民家庭和儿童健康研究补充
- 批准号:
10541788 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 57.87万 - 项目类别:
Immigrant Families and Children's Health: The Intergenerational Health Impact of Federal and State Immigration Policy
移民家庭和儿童健康:联邦和州移民政策对代际健康的影响
- 批准号:
10712770 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 57.87万 - 项目类别:
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