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Racial Stratification, Immigration, and Health Inequality: A Life Course-Intersectional Approach

While health inequalities related to race/ethnicity, nativity, and age are well documented, it remains unclear how these axes of stratification combine to shape health trajectories, especially in middle and late life. This study addresses gaps in the literature by drawing on both life course and int...

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Published in:Social forces 2018-06, Vol.96 (4), p.1507-1540
Main Author: Brown, Tyson H.
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description While health inequalities related to race/ethnicity, nativity, and age are well documented, it remains unclear how these axes of stratification combine to shape health trajectories, especially in middle and late life. This study addresses gaps in the literature by drawing on both life course and intersectionality perspectives to understand inequalities in morbidity trajectories. Using growth curve models applied to data from the Health and Retirement Study, I examine the life course patterning of health inequalities among US- and foreign-born non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, and Mexican Americans between the ages of 51 and 80 (N = 16,265). Findings are consistent with premature aging and cumulative disadvantage processes: US- and foreign-born blacks and Mexican Americans experience earlier health deterioration than US-born whites, and they also tend to exhibit steeper health declines with age. Moreover, contrary to the common assumption of monolithic healthy immigrant and erosion processes, results show that these processes are contingent on both race/ethnicity and age: compared with US-born whites, white immigrants have a persistent health advantage, while black and Mexican American immigrants experience a health disadvantage that increases with age. These results suggest that among nonwhite immigrants, the immigrant health advantage may be offset by cumulative exposure to racialized immigrant incorporation processes. A wide array of health-related factors including socioeconomic resources, health behaviors, and medical care account for some, but not all, group differences in morbidity trajectories. Findings highlight the utility of life course and intersectionality perspectives for understanding health inequalities.
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This study addresses gaps in the literature by drawing on both life course and intersectionality perspectives to understand inequalities in morbidity trajectories. Using growth curve models applied to data from the Health and Retirement Study, I examine the life course patterning of health inequalities among US- and foreign-born non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, and Mexican Americans between the ages of 51 and 80 (N = 16,265). Findings are consistent with premature aging and cumulative disadvantage processes: US- and foreign-born blacks and Mexican Americans experience earlier health deterioration than US-born whites, and they also tend to exhibit steeper health declines with age. Moreover, contrary to the common assumption of monolithic healthy immigrant and erosion processes, results show that these processes are contingent on both race/ethnicity and age: compared with US-born whites, white immigrants have a persistent health advantage, while black and Mexican American immigrants experience a health disadvantage that increases with age. These results suggest that among nonwhite immigrants, the immigrant health advantage may be offset by cumulative exposure to racialized immigrant incorporation processes. A wide array of health-related factors including socioeconomic resources, health behaviors, and medical care account for some, but not all, group differences in morbidity trajectories. 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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Business Source Ultimate; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Project Muse:Jisc Collections:Project MUSE Journals Agreement 2024:Premium Collection; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Oxford Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects African Americans
Age
Age differences
Aging
Analysis
Black people
Black white differences
Deterioration
Emigration and immigration
Equality
Ethnicity
Health behavior
Health disparities
Health services
Hispanic Americans
Immigrants
Immigration
Inequality
INEQUALITY AND STRATIFICATION
Intersectionality
Life course
Medical Services
Medicine
Mexican Americans
Morbidity
Noncitizens
Public health
Race
Racial stratification
Retirement
Social aspects
Social stratification
Socioeconomic factors
White people
Whites
title Racial Stratification, Immigration, and Health Inequality: A Life Course-Intersectional Approach
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