Racialised Immigrant Health: The Association Between Previous Documentation Status and Self-Reported Health Among Immigrants With Lawful Permanent Resident Status.

IF 2.7 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Anonymous
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Despite a growing body of research about the negative impacts of an unlawful documentation status on immigrants' wellbeing, limited studies have examined immigrants' documentation status from a dynamic perspective. This study analyses data from the New Immigrant Survey to investigate the relationships between racial-ethnic identity, exposure to a precarious documentation status, and self-rated health. Using linear probability and inverse probability weighted models, this study finds that having been previously in a precarious documentation status and spending more years in this circumstance are associated with poorer self-rated health at the baseline survey period (2003). In the follow-up period (2007-2009), the relationship between previous individual-level exposure to a precarious documentation status and self-rated health attenuated and became statistically insignificant after controlling for demographic and socioeconomic factors. Latinx and Asian immigrants disproportionately spend longer periods of time in precarious documentation statuses and tend to have worse self-rated health in the follow-up period compared with White immigrants. Overall, this study points to the importance of conceptualising documentation status as dynamic and to study it acknowledging the racialized nature of this exposure.

种族化的移民健康:具有合法永久居民身份的移民先前文件状态与自我报告健康之间的关系。
尽管关于非法证件身份对移民福利的负面影响的研究越来越多,但从动态角度审视移民证件身份的研究有限。本研究分析了新移民调查的数据,以调查种族-民族认同、暴露于不稳定的证件状态和自评健康之间的关系。利用线性概率和逆概率加权模型,本研究发现,在基线调查期间,以前处于不稳定的文件状态和在这种情况下花费的时间更长与较差的自评健康状况有关(2003年)。在随访期间(2007-2009年),在控制了人口和社会经济因素后,先前个人水平暴露于不稳定证件状态与自评健康之间的关系减弱,在统计上不显著。与白人移民相比,拉丁裔和亚洲移民在不稳定的证件状态下花费的时间更长,而且在随访期间的自评健康状况往往更差。总的来说,这项研究指出了将文件状态概念化为动态的重要性,并在承认这种暴露的种族化性质的情况下进行研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.90%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Sociology of Health & Illness is an international journal which publishes sociological articles on all aspects of health, illness, medicine and health care. We welcome empirical and theoretical contributions in this field.
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