Implications of black immigrant health for U.S. racial disparities in health.

Jen'nan Ghazal Read, Michael O Emerson, Alvin Tarlov
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引用次数: 117

Abstract

This paper contributes to a growing understanding of U.S. black-white health disparities by using national-level data to disaggregate the health status of black Americans into the following subgroups: U.S.-born blacks, black immigrants from Africa, black immigrants from the West Indies, and black immigrants from Europe. Using new data on the 2000 and 2001 National Health Interview Surveys (NHIS), the authors compare the status of U.S.- and foreign-born blacks to that of U.S.-born whites on three measures of health. The analysis finds that U.S.-born and European-born blacks have worse self-rated health, higher odds of activity limitation, and higher odds of limitation due to hypertension compared to U.S.-born whites. In contrast, African-born blacks have better health than U.S.-born whites on all three measures, while West Indian-born blacks have poorer self-rated health and higher odds of limitation due to hypertension but lower odds of activity limitation. These findings suggest that grouping together foreign-born blacks misses important variations within this population. Rather than being uniform, the black immigrant health advantage varies by region of birth and by health status measure. The authors conclude by exploring the implications of these findings for researchers, health professionals, and public policy.

黑人移民健康对美国种族健康差异的影响。
本文通过使用国家级数据将美国黑人的健康状况分解为以下亚组:美国出生的黑人、来自非洲的黑人移民、来自西印度群岛的黑人移民和来自欧洲的黑人移民,有助于加深对美国黑人-白人健康差异的理解。利用2000年和2001年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)的新数据,作者在三项健康指标上比较了美国和外国出生的黑人与美国出生的白人的状况。分析发现,与美国出生的白人相比,在美国出生的黑人和在欧洲出生的黑人自我评估的健康状况更差,活动受限的几率更高,因高血压而受到限制的几率也更高。相比之下,在非洲出生的黑人在所有三项指标上都比在美国出生的白人更健康,而西印度出生的黑人自评健康状况较差,高血压导致的限制几率较高,但活动限制的几率较低。这些发现表明,将外国出生的黑人归为一类忽略了这一人群中重要的变化。黑人移民的健康优势不是统一的,而是因出生地区和健康状况的不同而不同。作者最后探讨了这些发现对研究人员、卫生专业人员和公共政策的影响。
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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