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Unhealthy trajectories: Race, migration, and the formation of health disparities in the United States.

机译:不健康的轨迹:美国的种族,移民和健康差距的形成。

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This dissertation investigates race as a determinant of health trajectories for immigrants to the United States. Previous research suggests that integration into U.S. society can be detrimental to the health and mortality outcomes of many minority immigrant groups. Popular explanations for post-migration health changes have focused on individual-level mechanisms, such as behavioral changes associated with acculturation. I use multiple sources of data and a variety of quantitative methods to situate these changes in a context of racial inequality for three migrant groups. In my first case, I draw on historical data collected from the Vital Statistics of the United States and the U.S. Census to analyze the changing health trajectories associated with European immigrants' transition from marginalized minorities to members of the white majority in the early 20th century. My second case draws on restricted-use data from the National Survey of American Life to test how interpersonal and institutionalized racial discrimination influence health patterns of black immigrants from the Caribbean. In my third case, I use population-level birth data from New York City (2000-2010) to investigate changes in birth outcomes associated with elevated anti-Muslim sentiment after the attacks of September 11, 2001. Taken together, these cases demonstrate how racial formation in the United States shapes patterns of post-migration outcomes. I find that marginalized European immigrants exhibited patterns of worsening mortality trajectories, but the overall gap between European immigrants and native-born whites narrowed as racial categories were redefined in the early 20th century. This pattern of intergenerational health improvement contrasts with the segmented trajectories of contemporary Caribbean black immigrants, whose health is shaped by experiences of both interpersonal and institutionalized racism. Similarly, rates of low birth weight births increased for Middle Eastern and Asian Indian immigrants in the decade after the attacks of September 11, 2001, likely due to increased experiences of discrimination. By tying health trajectories and outcome disparities to the construction and stratification of racial boundaries, I advance theory about the "upstream" social causes of health and illness and develop a framework for analyzing the sociohistorical formation of health disparities.
机译:本文研究了种族作为决定美国移民健康轨迹的因素。先前的研究表明,融入美国社会可能损害许多少数民族移民群体的健康和死亡率。关于迁移后健康变化的流行解释集中在个人层面的机制上,例如与适应相关的行为改变。我使用多种数据来源和多种定量方法,将这些变化置于三个移民群体种族不平等的背景下。在第一个案例中,我利用从美国生命统计数据和美国人口普查中收集的历史数据来分析与20世纪初欧洲移民从边缘化少数族裔向白人占多数的转变有关的健康轨迹的变化。我的第二个案例借鉴了《美国生活调查》中的限制使用数据,以测试人际和制度化的种族歧视如何影响加勒比黑人移民的健康状况。在我的第三个案例中,我使用了纽约市(2000-2010)的人口水平出生数据,调查了2001年9月11日袭击后与反穆斯林情绪升高相关的出生结局变化。这些案例共同说明了如何美国的种族形成塑造了移民后成果的模式。我发现边缘化的欧洲移民的死亡率轨迹呈恶化趋势,但是随着种族类别在20世纪初重新定义,欧洲移民与本地出生的白人之间的总体差距有所缩小。这种代际健康改善的模式与当代加勒比黑人移民的细分轨迹形成鲜明对比,后者的健康状况受到人际和制度化种族主义的影响。同样,在2001年9月11日袭击发生后的十年中,中东和亚洲印度裔移民的低出生体重儿出生率有所增加,这可能是由于歧视经历的增加。通过将健康轨迹和结果差异与种族边界的构建和分层联系起来,我提出了有关健康和疾病的“上游”社会原因的理论,并建立了分析健康差异的社会历史形成的框架。

著录项

  • 作者

    Bakhtiari, Elyas.;

  • 作者单位

    Boston University.;

  • 授予单位 Boston University.;
  • 学科 Sociology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 214 p.
  • 总页数 214
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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