Choi Jin Young
Sam Houston State University, Department of Sociology, Huntsville, TX 77341, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Oct;69(8):1261-71. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.08.001. Epub 2009 Aug 31.
Immigrant health care is the product of the dynamic interaction between societal factors and the individual's socio-economic and cultural characteristics. Our knowledge about immigrant health care, however, has been limited to individual characteristics, without paying attention to the social context in which immigrants reside. This paper explores the effects of social contexts on access to health care among recent immigrants. As a natural experiment, it compares health care experiences of three immigrant groups in Hawaii - Filipinos, Koreans, and Marshallese - who are situated in different social contexts including immigrant health policy, ethnic community, and individual networks. Through household surveys conducted between October 2005 and January 2006, information of 378 recent immigrant adults on health care access, health insurance status, socio-demographic characteristics, linguistic and cultural factors, health status, ethnic community social capital, and social networks was obtained. The results of analyses show that Marshallese respondents have better access to health care than the other two groups, in spite of their lowest socioeconomic status. The high insurance rate of the Marshallese, mainly associated with a state health policy that provides health insurance assistance for the Marshallese, is the major contributor of their greater health care access. While Filipino immigrants do not benefit from state insurance assistance, high levels of health care resources and social capital within the Filipino community enable them to have significantly better health care access than Koreans, who have higher income and educational attainment. Interestingly, the advanced family/kinship networks are associated with better levels of immigrant health care access, while the increase of co-ethnic friend networks is related to lower access to health care. This study implies that restoration of immigrants' eligibility for public health insurance assistance, development of health care resources and social capital within ethnic communities, and mobilization of immigrant networks would be effective starting points to improve health care access among immigrants.
移民医疗保健是社会因素与个人社会经济及文化特征之间动态互动的产物。然而,我们对移民医疗保健的了解一直局限于个人特征,而未关注移民所处的社会背景。本文探讨社会背景对新移民获得医疗保健的影响。作为一项自然实验,它比较了夏威夷三个处于不同社会背景(包括移民健康政策、族裔社区和个人网络)的移民群体——菲律宾人、韩国人和马绍尔人的医疗保健经历。通过在2005年10月至2006年1月期间进行的家庭调查,获取了378名新移民成年人在医疗保健获取、健康保险状况、社会人口特征、语言和文化因素、健康状况、族裔社区社会资本以及社会网络等方面的信息。分析结果表明,尽管马绍尔人的社会经济地位最低,但他们比其他两个群体更容易获得医疗保健。马绍尔人高保险率主要与一项为马绍尔人提供健康保险援助的州健康政策相关,这是他们获得更多医疗保健的主要因素。虽然菲律宾移民未受益于州保险援助,但菲律宾社区内高水平的医疗保健资源和社会资本使他们比收入和教育程度更高的韩国人在获得医疗保健方面明显更好。有趣的是,发达的家庭/亲属网络与更好的移民医疗保健获取水平相关,而同族朋友网络的增加则与较低的医疗保健获取相关。这项研究表明,恢复移民获得公共健康保险援助的资格、发展族裔社区内的医疗保健资源和社会资本以及调动移民网络将是改善移民医疗保健获取的有效起点。