Publication | Open Access
Negative Acculturation and Nothing More? Cumulative Disadvantage and Mortality during the Immigrant Adaptation Process among Latinos in the United States
119
Citations
81
References
2014
Year
Human MigrationEthnicityHispanic MortalityHealth Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesUs CultureSocial Determinants Of HealthUnited StatesSocial SciencesRaceNegative AcculturationLatino/a StudiesLatino CultureHealth InequalitySocial HealthCultural IntegrationHealth InequityPublic HealthMigration PolicyCumulative DisadvantageBiobehavioral HealthHealth EquityEpidemiologyU.s. SocietyGlobal HealthSociologyHealth BehaviorMass ImmigrationSocial EpidemiologyDemographyHealth DisparityImmigrant HealthImmigration
Foreign- and U.S.-born Hispanic health deteriorates with increasing exposure and acculturation to mainstream U.S. society. Because these associations are robust to (static) socioeconomic controls, negative acculturation has become their primary explanation. This overemphasis, however, has neglected important alternative structural explanations. Examining Hispanic mortality using the 1998–2006 U.S. National Health Interview Survey-Linked Mortality File according to nativity, immigrant adaptation measures, and health behaviors, this study presents indirect but compelling evidence that suggests negative acculturation is not the only or main explanation for this deterioration.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1