Volume 39 - Article 7 | Pages 209–250
Disability crossover: Is there a Hispanic immigrant health advantage that reverses from working to old age?
By Mara Getz Sheftel, Frank W. Heiland
39-7_Sheftel_Heiland_2018_Figures (Excel file, 657 kB)
demographic-research.39-7 (zip file, 342 kB)
readme.39-7 (text file, 1 kB)
Abstract
Background: Hispanic immigrants have been found to be more likely to have a disability than US-born populations. Studies have primarily focused on populations aged 60 and older; little is known about immigrant disability at younger ages.
Objective: Taking a broader perspective, we investigate whether Hispanic immigrants have lower disability rates in midlife; if so, at what ages this health advantage reverses; and the correlates of this pattern.
Methods: Using American Community Survey 2010–2014 data, we estimate age-specific disability prevalence rates by gender, nativity, education, and migration age from age 40 to 80. We also present estimates by six types of disability.
Results: Compared to non-Hispanic whites, disability prevalence among foreign-born Mexican women is lower until age 53 (men: 61) and greater after 59 (66). Similar patterns hold for other foreign-born Hispanics. Crossovers are observed in rates of ambulatory, cognitive, independent living, and self-care disability. Evidence of a steeper age–disability gradient among less-educated immigrants is found. Minimal differences are noted by migration age, challenging an acculturation explanation for the crossover.
Contribution: The paper contributes to a better understanding of immigrant–native disability patterns in the United States. It is the first to systematically document a Hispanic immigrant health advantage in disability that reverses from working to old age. Hispanic immigrants (particularly foreign-born Mexican women), may face steeper risk trajectories, consistent with their greater concentration in low-skill manual occupations. We call for increased scholarly attention to this phenomenon.
Author’s Affiliation
- Mara Getz Sheftel - Rutgers University, United States of America EMAIL
- Frank W. Heiland - City University of New York, United States of America EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Family structure and wellbeing of out-of-wedlock children: The significance of the biological parents' relationship
Volume 15 - Article 4
Trends in East-West German Migration from 1989 to 2002
Volume 11 - Article 7
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Brothers, sisters, and the legacy of sibship: Childhood coresiding siblings and late-life cognitive decline in the United States
Volume 54 - Article 8
| Keywords:
cognitive decline,
cumulative disadvantage,
family structure,
resource dilution,
siblings,
United States of America
Analysing migrant fertility using machine learning techniques: An application of random survival forest to longitudinal data from France
Volume 53 - Article 21
| Keywords:
fertility,
immigrants,
machine learning,
random survival forest,
survival analysis
The partnership, fertility, and employment trajectories of immigrants in the United Kingdom: An intersectional life course approach using three-channel sequence analysis
Volume 53 - Article 10
| Keywords:
employment,
fertility,
immigrants,
multi-channel sequence analysis,
partnership,
United Kingdom
Where do we go from here? Partnership-parenthood trajectories of cohabitation as first union during young adulthood in the United States
Volume 53 - Article 9
| Keywords:
cohabitation,
family inequality,
fertility,
marriage,
race/ethnicity,
transition to adulthood,
union formation,
United States of America
The impact of population heterogeneity on the age trajectory of neonatal mortality: A study of US births 2008–2014
Volume 53 - Article 7
| Keywords:
frailty,
heterogeneity,
heterogeneity,
infant mortality,
mortality,
mortality selection,
mortality selection,
neonatal mortality,
United States of America
Cited References: 87
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar