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Explaining the immigrant health advantage: self-selection and protection in health-related factors among five major national-origin immigrant groups in the United States

Explaining the immigrant health advantage: self-selection and protection in health-related factors among five major national-origin immigrant groups in the United States
Explaining the immigrant health advantage: self-selection and protection in health-related factors among five major national-origin immigrant groups in the United States
Despite being newcomers, immigrants often exhibit better health relative to native-born populations in industrialized societies. We extend prior efforts to identify whether self-selection and/or protection explain this advantage. We examine migrant height and smoking levels just prior to immigration to test for self-selection; and we analyze smoking behavior since immigration, controlling for self-selection, to assess protection. We study individuals aged 20–49 from five major national origins: India, China, the Philippines, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic. To assess self-selection, we compare migrants, interviewed in the National Health and Interview Surveys (NHIS), with nonmigrant peers in sending nations, interviewed in the World Health Surveys. To test for protection, we contrast migrants’ changes in smoking since immigration with two counterfactuals: (1) rates that immigrants would have exhibited had they adopted the behavior of U.S.-born non-Hispanic whites in the NHIS (full “assimilation”); and (2) rates that migrants would have had if they had adopted the rates of nonmigrants in sending countries (no-migration scenario). We find statistically significant and substantial self-selection, particularly among men from both higher-skilled (Indians and Filipinos in height, Chinese in smoking) and lower-skilled (Mexican) undocumented pools. We also find significant and substantial protection in smoking among immigrant groups with stronger relative social capital (Mexicans and Dominicans).
0070-3370
175-200
Riosmena, Fernando
0ef6fe2a-8812-4230-9fa5-8cc25d0dc146
Kuhn, Randall
1a985347-60ff-4239-825d-f0e7d209a1b8
Jochem, Warren
ef65df67-4364-4438-92e9-f93ceedb8da1
Riosmena, Fernando
0ef6fe2a-8812-4230-9fa5-8cc25d0dc146
Kuhn, Randall
1a985347-60ff-4239-825d-f0e7d209a1b8
Jochem, Warren
ef65df67-4364-4438-92e9-f93ceedb8da1

Riosmena, Fernando, Kuhn, Randall and Jochem, Warren (2017) Explaining the immigrant health advantage: self-selection and protection in health-related factors among five major national-origin immigrant groups in the United States. Demography, 54 (1), 175-200. (doi:10.1007/s13524-016-0542-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Despite being newcomers, immigrants often exhibit better health relative to native-born populations in industrialized societies. We extend prior efforts to identify whether self-selection and/or protection explain this advantage. We examine migrant height and smoking levels just prior to immigration to test for self-selection; and we analyze smoking behavior since immigration, controlling for self-selection, to assess protection. We study individuals aged 20–49 from five major national origins: India, China, the Philippines, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic. To assess self-selection, we compare migrants, interviewed in the National Health and Interview Surveys (NHIS), with nonmigrant peers in sending nations, interviewed in the World Health Surveys. To test for protection, we contrast migrants’ changes in smoking since immigration with two counterfactuals: (1) rates that immigrants would have exhibited had they adopted the behavior of U.S.-born non-Hispanic whites in the NHIS (full “assimilation”); and (2) rates that migrants would have had if they had adopted the rates of nonmigrants in sending countries (no-migration scenario). We find statistically significant and substantial self-selection, particularly among men from both higher-skilled (Indians and Filipinos in height, Chinese in smoking) and lower-skilled (Mexican) undocumented pools. We also find significant and substantial protection in smoking among immigrant groups with stronger relative social capital (Mexicans and Dominicans).

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 August 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 January 2017
Published date: 11 February 2017
Organisations: WorldPop, Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 406212
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406212
ISSN: 0070-3370
PURE UUID: ae19b207-e2b6-42fd-93e1-e22fdef1787c
ORCID for Warren Jochem: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2192-5988

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2017 10:42
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:05

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Contributors

Author: Fernando Riosmena
Author: Randall Kuhn
Author: Warren Jochem ORCID iD

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