Vargas Edward D, Sanchez Gabriel R, Juárez Melina
University of Wisconsin, Madison.
University of New Mexico.
Polit Policy. 2017 Jun;45(3):312-337. doi: 10.1111/polp.12203. Epub 2017 Jun 9.
This study examines how anti-immigrant policies affect the physical health of Latina/os in the United States. Merging two unique datasets: sum of anti-immigrant policies by state from 2005-2011 and a 2011 Robert Wood Johnson Center for Health Policy nationally representative sample of Latina/os (n=1,200), we estimate a series of logistic regressions to understand how anti-immigrant legislations are affecting the health of Latina/os. Our modeling approach takes into consideration Latinos' diverse experience, context that is widely overlooked in datasets that treat Latina/os as a homogeneous ethnic group. Our findings suggest that an increase in anti-immigrant laws enacted by a state decreases the probability of respondents reporting optimal health, even when controlling for other relevant factors, such as citizenship status, language of interview, and interethnic variation. The implication and significance of this work has tremendous impacts for scholars, policy makers, health service providers and applied researchers interested in reducing health disparities among minority populations.
本研究考察了反移民政策如何影响美国拉丁裔的身体健康。通过合并两个独特的数据集:2005年至2011年各州反移民政策的总和,以及2011年罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊健康政策中心具有全国代表性的拉丁裔样本(n = 1200),我们估计了一系列逻辑回归,以了解反移民立法如何影响拉丁裔的健康。我们的建模方法考虑了拉丁裔的多样经历,而在将拉丁裔视为单一民族群体的数据集中,这种背景普遍被忽视。我们的研究结果表明,即使在控制了其他相关因素,如公民身份、访谈语言和族裔间差异之后,一个州颁布的反移民法律增加仍会降低受访者报告最佳健康状况的概率。这项工作的意义和重要性对那些关注减少少数族裔健康差距的学者、政策制定者、医疗服务提供者和应用研究人员有着巨大影响。