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Erschienen in: Demography 3/2013

01.06.2013

Migration Selection, Protection, and Acculturation in Health: A Binational Perspective on Older Adults

verfasst von: Fernando Riosmena, Rebeca Wong, Alberto Palloni

Erschienen in: Demography | Ausgabe 3/2013

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Abstract

In this article, we test for four potential explanations of the Hispanic Health Paradox (HHP): the “salmon bias,” emigration selection, and sociocultural protection originating in either destination or sending country. To reduce biases related to attrition by return migration typical of most U.S.-based surveys, we combine data from the Mexican Health and Aging Study in Mexico and the U.S. National Health Interview Survey to compare self-reported diabetes, hypertension, current smoking, obesity, and self-rated health among Mexican-born men ages 50 and older according to their previous U.S. migration experience, and U.S.-born Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. We also use height, a measure of health during childhood, to bolster some of our tests. We find an immigrant advantage relative to non-Hispanic whites in hypertension and, to a lesser extent, obesity. We find evidence consistent with emigration selection and the salmon bias in height, hypertension, and self-rated health among immigrants with less than 15 years of experience in the United States; we do not find conclusive evidence consistent with sociocultural protection mechanisms. Finally, we illustrate that although ignoring return migrants when testing for the HHP and its mechanisms, as well as for the association between U.S. experience and health, exaggerates these associations, they are not fully driven by return migration-related attrition.

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Fußnoten
1
Also note that the Latino immigrant advantage in mortality seems to be robust to the existence of various kinds of data artifacts (Elo et al. 2004; Markides and Eschbach 2005).
 
2
It is unclear whether the same patterns hold for the various other health outcomes that Crimmins et al. (2005) examined because the analytical strategy they followed did not involve similar cross-sample comparisons allowing separate tests for emigration and return migration selection.
 
3
Life expectancy for both sexes in the United States is 78 years, while in Mexico, it is two years lower (World Health Organization WHO 2009). Although this difference is nontrivial, it is perhaps less than expected given the large income and development gap between the two countries (Kuhn 2010).
 
4
About 60 % to 70 % of U.S. migrants came from this region between 1925 and 1980, the period in which the members of the cohorts under study emigrated to the United States for the first time (Durand and Massey 2003: chapter 3). In analyses not shown, we restricted the MHAS sample to individuals living in high-migration states, finding similar results to those using the full sample.
 
5
Our results do not change substantially if we ignore this restriction, which eliminates 36 % of all return migrants. We deem these tests, however, as more conservative than those using the full sample of return migrants.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Migration Selection, Protection, and Acculturation in Health: A Binational Perspective on Older Adults
verfasst von
Fernando Riosmena
Rebeca Wong
Alberto Palloni
Publikationsdatum
01.06.2013
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Demography / Ausgabe 3/2013
Print ISSN: 0070-3370
Elektronische ISSN: 1533-7790
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13524-012-0178-9

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