Ortega Alexander N, Horwitz Sarah M, Fang Hai, Kuo Alice A, Wallace Steven P, Inkelas Moira
Departments of Health Services, School of Public Health, Institute for Social Research, University of California, Los Angeles, 2134 Rolfe Hall, Los Angeles, California 90095-1484, USA.
Acad Pediatr. 2009 Jul-Aug;9(4):278-82. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2009.02.007. Epub 2009 Apr 25.
To examine parent concerns about development, learning, and behavior for young children of Mexican origin, and to identify whether these reports differ by families' citizenship/documentation status.
Data come from the 2005 California Health Interview Survey, a population-based random-digit dial telephone survey of California's noninstitutionalized population. California Health Inerview Survey (CHIS) investigators completed interviews of 43 020 households with a total of 5856 children under age 6 years, of whom 1786 were reported being of Mexican origin. Developmental risk was measured by parent concerns elicited by the Parents' Evaluation of Developmental Status. We used bivariate and multivariate analyses to examine associations between developmental risk and family citizenship/documentation status (parents are undocumented, at least one documented noncitizen parent, or both parents are US citizens) among children of Mexican origin and US-born non-Latino white children, after adjusting for age, income, parental education, and predominant household language.
In multivariate analyses, children of Mexican origin did not differ significantly from US-born white children in developmental risk (odds ratio 1.12, 95% confidence interval 0.88-1.42). In subgroup analyses, children of Mexican origin with undocumented parents had higher odds of developmental risk (odds ratio 1.53, 95% confidence interval 1.00-2.33) than non-Latino white children whose parents were citizens, after adjusting for confounders.
Mexican children with undocumented parents have greater parent-reported developmental risk than Mexican and white children whose parents are US citizens or otherwise legally documented. More research is needed to understand the roles of immigration stress and home environments on the developmental risks of children in households with undocumented parents.
研究墨西哥裔幼儿的父母对其发育、学习和行为的担忧,并确定这些报告是否因家庭的公民身份/文件状态而有所不同。
数据来自2005年加利福尼亚健康访谈调查,这是一项对加利福尼亚非机构化人口进行的基于人群的随机数字拨号电话调查。加利福尼亚健康访谈调查(CHIS)的调查人员对43020户家庭进行了访谈,这些家庭共有5856名6岁以下儿童,其中1786名被报告为墨西哥裔。发育风险通过父母对发育状况的评估所引发的父母担忧来衡量。在调整了年龄、收入、父母教育程度和主要家庭语言后,我们使用双变量和多变量分析来研究墨西哥裔儿童和美国出生的非拉丁裔白人儿童中发育风险与家庭公民身份/文件状态(父母无文件证明、至少有一名有文件证明的非公民父母或父母双方均为美国公民)之间的关联。
在多变量分析中,墨西哥裔儿童在发育风险方面与美国出生的白人儿童没有显著差异(优势比为1.12,95%置信区间为0.88 - 1.42)。在亚组分析中,在调整混杂因素后,父母无文件证明的墨西哥裔儿童比父母为公民的非拉丁裔白人儿童有更高的发育风险几率(优势比为1.53,95%置信区间为1.00 - 2.33)。
父母无文件证明的墨西哥儿童比父母为美国公民或以其他方式有合法文件证明的墨西哥和白人儿童,其父母报告的发育风险更大。需要更多研究来了解移民压力和家庭环境对父母无文件证明家庭中儿童发育风险的作用。