Being
born in the U.S.A. may not be good for Hispanic
health
Newswise — USC study finds
immigrants from Mexico in better health than
Mexicans-Americans born in the United States.
Hardy immigrants mask poor vital signs of
American-born Hispanic community, say
researchers.
Mexicans-Americans born and
raised in the United States are more likely to
suffer from conditions such as diabetes, high
blood pressure and high cholesterol than those
who emigrate from Mexico, according to a new
study from the University of Southern
California.
The difference may be due to poor nutrition and
less physical activity among native-born
Mexican-Americans. Also individuals who leave
Mexico for the United States may be fitter than
the ones who stay behind.
“One possible explanation is that people who
immigrate are healthy to begin with and they may
also have come here with better health habits,”
said Eileen Crimmins, lead author of the study
and professor of gerontology at USC. “The
generation born here has adopted American traits
such as smoking and eating at fast food
restaurants that were not as accessible in more
traditional parts of Mexico.”
In a comparison of risk factors across ethnic
groups, researchers from the USC Davis School of
Gerontology and the UCLA School of Medicine
found that U.S. born Mexican-Americans are
significantly worse off not just than whites but
also Mexican-born immigrants. The only group at
greater risk for disease than the U.S.-born
Mexican-American community is the black
population.
The research appears in the current issue of the
American Journal of Public Health and addresses
a contradiction found in other studies known as
the “Hispanic Paradox” – a claim that Hispanics
in the United States are healthier than whites
despite being poorer and less educated.
Instead, this study shows that
Mexicans-Americans born in the United States are
less healthy than whites of the same
socioeconomic background. Only foreign-born
Hispanics match their white counterparts. These
fit immigrants tip the scales for the Hispanic
population, skewing numbers that would otherwise
indicate an unhealthy Hispanic population.
The findings refute the “Hispanic Paradox” and
support the hypotheses that people who are not
healthy tend to stay in their home country and
some immigrants living in America who become
sick may return home.
“By gaining the healthiest of émigrés from
Mexico, the U.S. Hispanic population appears to
be a healthy community, one that rivals the
white population in low mortality rates and
positive health factors,” said Crimmins.
Crimmins says the distinction is significant
because a misperception of a robust Hispanic
population may affect policy decisions.
“Health promotion organizations and the
government may allocate resources differently if
they conclude there is no need to improve health
conditions of the native born Hispanic
population,” said Crimmins. “The ‘Hispanic
Paradox’ may not be so paradoxical in a
population with so many immigrants.”
Data were collected on adults aged 40 years and
older from the National Health and Nutrition
Survey (NHANES) conducted between 1999 and 2002.
Researchers examined vital
signs including blood pressure, cholesterol
levels and Body Mass Index ratings. Population
groups analyzed were Whites, Blacks, U.S.-born
Hispanics, foreign-born Hispanics and Hispanics
of Mexican origin. The analyses were controlled
for age, gender and socioeconomic status.
The conclusion that immigrants are a healthier
population group than those living in the United
States is reinforced by a second study using
NHANES data that focused on immigrants
specifically from Mexico. In a study soon to be
published in the journal Social Biology,
Crimmins’ group also found immigrants born in
Mexico that come to the United States are taller
and have better childhood nutrition than those
who stay in their country of origin. The results
indicate that migrants are selected based on
health as well as social economic standing.