Parker Emily, Schut Rebecca Anna, Boen Courtney
Rutgers University-New Brunswick, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, NJ, 08901, United States.
Case Western Reserve University, Department of Sociology, Cleveland, OH 44106, United States.
Soc Forces. 2024 Sep 3;103(3):992-1017. doi: 10.1093/sf/soae111. eCollection 2025 Mar.
In the United States, exclusionary public policies generate inequalities within and across labor, financial, and legal status hierarchies, which together undermine immigrant well-being. But can inclusive public policies improve immigrant health? We examine whether and how an immigrant-inclusive federal program, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), shaped health care access and use among farmworkers over nearly three decades, paying particular attention to disparities at the intersection of nativity and legal status. Linking historical administrative data on the location and funding of FQHCs with the National Agricultural Workers Survey from 1989-2017, we first document trends in farmworkers' county-level proximity to FQHCs and identify a steady increase in FQHC access among undocumented farmworkers following the Affordable Care Act. Next, using time-series cross-sectional regressions with a battery of fixed effects, we find that living in a county where FQHCs are available and better resourced is associated with increased health care use among undocumented farmworkers, but not among U.S.-born or documented immigrant farmworkers. We also find that county-level access to FQHCs is associated with reduced reports of language barriers to care among both documented and undocumented foreign-born farmworkers. These findings suggest that FQHCs may improve access for immigrants who are typically excluded from U.S. health care institutions. Still, county-level FQHC infrastructure is not associated with cost-related barriers to care for any nativity or legal status groups. Taken together, our study highlights both the potential and constraints of inclusive public policies for promoting health equity in a welfare state context characterized by commodification and stratification.
在美国,排他性公共政策在劳动力、金融和法律地位等级制度内部及之间造成不平等,这些不平等共同损害了移民的福祉。但是包容性公共政策能否改善移民健康状况呢?我们研究了一项包含移民的联邦项目——联邦合格医疗中心(FQHCs)——在近三十年里如何塑造了农场工人获得和使用医疗保健的情况,尤其关注出生国和法律地位交叉点上的差异。我们将FQHCs的位置和资金方面的历史行政数据与1989年至2017年的全国农业工人调查数据相联系,首先记录了农场工人在县级层面与FQHCs的接近程度趋势,并发现《平价医疗法案》通过后,无证农场工人获得FQHCs服务的机会稳步增加。接下来,我们使用一系列固定效应的时间序列横截面回归分析,发现生活在有FQHCs且资源更充足的县,与无证农场工人增加医疗保健使用相关,但与美国出生或有证件的移民农场工人无关。我们还发现,县级层面获得FQHCs服务与有证件和无证的外国出生农场工人中报告的就医语言障碍减少有关。这些发现表明,FQHCs可能改善那些通常被排除在美国医疗保健机构之外的移民的就医机会。尽管如此,县级FQHC基础设施与任何出生国或法律地位群体的就医费用相关障碍并无关联。总体而言,我们的研究凸显了在以商品化和分层为特征的福利国家背景下,包容性公共政策在促进健康公平方面的潜力和局限性。