Department of Health Management and Policy, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Health Services Administration, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, College Park, MD.
Med Care. 2018 Nov;56(11):919-926. doi: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000985.
This paper provides statewide estimates on health care access and utilization patterns and physical and behavioral health by citizenship and documentation status among Latinos in California.
This study used data from the 2011-2015 California Health Interview Survey to examine health care access and utilization and physical and behavioral health among a representative sample of all nonelderly Latino and US-born non-Latino white adults (N=51,386). Multivariable regressions estimated the associations between the dependent measures and citizenship/documentation status among Latinos (US-born, naturalized citizen, green card holder, and undocumented).
Adjusted results from multivariable analyses observed worse access and utilization patterns among immigrant Latinos compared with US-born Latinos, with undocumented immigrants using significantly less health care. Undocumented Latinos had lower odds of self-reporting excellent/very good health status compared with US-born Latinos, despite them having lower odds of having several physical and behavioral health outcomes (overweight/obesity, physician-diagnosed hypertension, asthma, self-reported psychological distress, and need for behavioral health services). Among those reporting a need for behavioral health services, access was also worse for undocumented Latinos when compared with US-born Latinos.
Patterns of poor health care access and utilization and better physical and behavioral health are observed across the continuum of documentation status, with undocumented immigrants having the worst access and utilization patterns and less disease. Despite fewer reported diagnoses and better mental health, undocumented Latinos reported poorer health status than their US-born counterparts.
本文提供了加利福尼亚州拉丁裔人群的医疗保健获取和利用模式以及公民身份和文件状况的身体和行为健康的全州估计值。
本研究使用了 2011-2015 年加利福尼亚健康访谈调查的数据,对所有非老年拉丁裔和美国出生的非拉丁裔白人成年人(N=51386)的代表性样本进行了医疗保健获取和利用以及身体和行为健康的调查。多变量回归估计了依赖指标与拉丁裔公民身份/文件状况(美国出生、入籍公民、绿卡持有者和无证移民)之间的关联。
多变量分析的调整结果表明,与美国出生的拉丁裔人相比,移民拉丁裔人的获取和利用模式较差,无证移民的医疗保健使用率明显较低。与美国出生的拉丁裔人相比,无证拉丁裔人自我报告的优秀/非常好的健康状况的可能性较低,尽管他们出现几种身体和行为健康结果(超重/肥胖、医生诊断的高血压、哮喘、自我报告的心理困扰和需要行为健康服务)的可能性较低。在报告需要行为健康服务的人群中,与美国出生的拉丁裔人相比,无证拉丁裔人的获得服务的机会也较差。
在文件状况的连续体中观察到医疗保健获取和利用不良以及身体和行为健康状况较好的模式,无证移民的获取和利用模式最差,疾病也最少。尽管无证拉丁裔人报告的诊断较少,心理健康状况较好,但他们的健康状况比美国出生的拉丁裔人差。