Rubalcava Luis N, Teruel Graciela M, Thomas Duncan, Goldman Noreen
Spectron Desarrollo, Mexico City, Mexico.
Am J Public Health. 2008 Jan;98(1):78-84. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2006.098418. Epub 2007 Nov 29.
We used nationally representative longitudinal data from the Mexican Family Life Survey to determine whether recent migrants from Mexico to the United States are healthier than other Mexicans. Previous research has provided little scientific evidence that tests the "healthy migrant" hypothesis.
Estimates were derived from logistic regressions of whether respondents moved to the United States between surveys in 2002 and 2005, by gender and urban versus rural residence. Covariates included physical health measurements, self-reported health, and education measured in 2002. Our primary sample comprised 6446 respondents aged 15 to 29 years.
Health significantly predicted subsequent migration among females and rural males. However, the associations were weak, few health indicators were statistically significant, and there was substantial variation in the estimates between males and females and between urban and rural dwellers.
On the basis of recent data for Mexico, the largest source of migrants to the United States, we found generally weak support for the healthy migrant hypothesis.
我们使用了来自墨西哥家庭生活调查的具有全国代表性的纵向数据,以确定近期从墨西哥移民到美国的人是否比其他墨西哥人更健康。先前的研究几乎没有提供检验“健康移民”假说的科学证据。
估计值来自于对2002年至2005年调查期间受访者是否移民到美国的逻辑回归分析,按性别以及城市和农村居住地进行划分。协变量包括2002年测量的身体健康指标、自我报告的健康状况和教育程度。我们的主要样本包括6446名年龄在15至29岁之间的受访者。
健康状况显著预测了女性和农村男性随后的移民情况。然而,这种关联较弱,很少有健康指标具有统计学意义,而且男性与女性之间以及城市和农村居民之间的估计值存在很大差异。
基于来自美国最大移民来源国墨西哥的近期数据,我们发现对“健康移民”假说的支持总体上较弱。