首页> 外文学位 >Acculturation, socioeconomic status, and body weight trajectory among adults of immigrant origins in the U.S.
【24h】

Acculturation, socioeconomic status, and body weight trajectory among adults of immigrant origins in the U.S.

机译:美国移民成年成年人的适应能力,社会经济地位和体重轨迹

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

Socioeconomic status (SES) and acculturation are important predictors of health in immigrant populations. However, the immigrant health literature largely overlooks the relationship between SES and acculturation. Using data on immigrants with developing country origins in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1985-2010, the study examines the joint effects of SES and acculturation on Body Mass Index (BMI) and its trajectory from age of early 20s till late 50s. It asks 1) How does adult SES and acculturation influence immigrant weight over time? 2) How does childhood SES and acculturation influence immigrant weight over time?) 3) Does adult SES mediate the influences of childhood SES on immigrant weight and does the mediation process vary by acculturation? 4) How does social mobility and acculturation influence immigrant weight over time?;Adult SES is measured by education and family income. Childhood SES is measured by an index that combines the parental education and the occupation of the primary adults in household during the respondent's childhood. Social mobility is measured by comparing the occupation of primary adults in the respondent's childhood and the respondent's or spouse's occupation at age 25. Acculturation is assessed by two proxy measures, including immigrant generation and language spoken in childhood. The results of linear mixed effects models indicate a non-significant relationship between adult SES and BMI for the first and second generations. Among the first generation immigrants, high education is related to higher BMI for those speaking only English in childhood, but to lower BMI for those speaking other languages. Among the first generation immigrants, the BMI difference attributable to education decreases, increases, and finally decreases over age between 20s and the age of 60. No differences in the relationships between adult SES and BMI/BMI changes are found across language spoken for the second generation. For the third and plus generation speaking only English, the adult SES-BMI relationship is negative when adult SES is measured by education, and positive when it is measured by income. No relationship between adult SES and BMI is found for the third and plus generation speaking other languages.;The results indicate a negative relationship between childhood SES and BMI for immigrants with different generation status and English proficiency. Lower BMI is found among the second generation than the third and plus generation; and the relationship is stronger among those with high SES in childhood. The childhood SES-BMI relationship is similar for the first and third and plus generations, even though a lower average BMI is found among the first generation immigrants. For the first and third and plus generations, the negative childhood SES-BMI relationship is stronger among those speaking non-English languages, than among their counterparts speaking only English in childhood; but for the second generation, the childhood SES-BMI relationship is stronger among those speaking only English in childhood.;The BMI difference attributable to childhood SES decreases over age for the second and third and plus generations, and it remains steady for the first generation immigrants. Among the first and second generations, lower BMI attributed to speaking only English in childhood remains from age 20s to age 50. For the third and plus generation, BMI difference attributed to childhood SES is small and shows a pattern of initial decrease, subsequent stability, and final increase for those speaking only English; it follows an increasing and then decreasing pattern over age for their counterparts speaking languages other than English. The third and plus generation speaking only English exhibit higher BMI than their counterparts speaking other languages among those with high childhood SES; this relationship is evident from age 20 until age 58.;Neither education nor income mediates the effects of childhood SES on BMI for the second generation. For the first and third and plus generations, adult education mediates the effects of childhood SES on BMI, but the mediation only explains a limited part of the relationship. For the first generation immigrants, upward mobility is related to lower BMI than stable low status but does not differ from stable high status. For the second generation, upward mobility is related to higher BMI than stable high and low statuses. For the third and plus generation speaking non-English languages in childhood, upward mobility is related to lower BMI than stable high and low statues.;The results provide evidence that SES and acculturation jointly affect immigrant BMI; while indicating complicated relationships among SES, acculturation, and BMI. First, the study partially supports the flat adult SES-BMI relationship for newly arrived immigrants. Second, it suggests adult education is a more sensitive SES measure than family income in analyzing health outcomes, such as BMI. Third, the study supports a critical effect of early life experience in adult life which mostly is not through its projection into SES in adulthood. This effect is evident regardless of acculturation level. Fourth, decreasing, not increasing, health disparities attributed to SES are consistent with an "age-as-leveler" theory. Fifth, the study depicts distinct relationships between SES, English proficiency, and BMI for different generations of immigrants. This finding suggests different roles language plays across stages of acculturation. Sixth, the study indicates a "healthy immigrant paradox" among highly acculturated immigrants. The study provides new starting points for future research in the field of immigrant studies.
机译:社会经济状况(SES)和适应能力是移民人口健康的重要预测指标。但是,移民健康文献在很大程度上忽略了SES与文化适应之间的关系。该研究使用1985-2010年全国青年纵向调查中来自发展中国家的移民数据,研究了SES和适应度对体重指数(BMI)的共同影响及其从20年代初到50年代后期的轨迹。它提出以下问题:1)随着时间的推移,成年人的SES和适应能力如何影响移民的体重? 2)儿童SES和适应能力如何随时间影响移民体重?)3)成人SES是否介导儿童SES对移民体重的影响,并且调解过程会因适应能力的变化而变化吗? (4)随着时间的流逝,社会流动性和适应能力如何影响移民的体重?;成年人的社会经济地位是通过教育和家庭收入来衡量的。儿童SES是由一个指标衡量的,该指标结合了父母的教育程度和被调查者童年期间家庭主要成年人的职业状况。通过比较受访者儿童时期的主要成年人职业和受访者在25岁时的成年人职业,来衡量社会流动性。文化适应性通过两种替代方法进行评估,包括移民产生和儿童时期使用的语言。线性混合效应模型的结果表明,第一代和第二代成年人的SES与BMI之间无显着关系。在第一代移民中,高学历与儿童期仅讲英语的人的BMI较高有关,而与其他语言的人的BMI较低相关。在第一代移民中,归因于教育的BMI差异随着20岁到60岁之间的年龄而减小,增加,并最终减小。在第二语言中,成年SES与BMI / BMI变化之间的关系没有发现差异。代。对于仅讲英语的第三代及以后的一代,成人SES-BMI关系在通过教育衡量成人SES时为负,而在通过收入衡量时为正。在第三代及以上一代说其他语言时,未发现成年人的SES与BMI之间的关系。结果表明,具有不同世代身份和英语水平的移民的儿童SES与BMI之间存在负相关。在第二代中发现的BMI低于第三代和增强型;儿童期SES高的人之间的关系更紧密。尽管第一代移民中的平均BMI较低,但第一,第三代及以后的儿童期SES-BMI关系相似。对于第一代,第三代及以后的一代,说非英语的儿童中,SES-BMI与儿童的消极关系要强于那些只说英语的儿童。但是对于第二代,在儿童期仅说英语的儿童中,儿童SES与BMI的关系更强。;由于儿童SES的BMI差异在第二,第三代及以后的一代中随着年龄的增长而减小,并且在第一代中保持稳定。移民。在第一代和第二代中,较低的BMI归因于20岁到50岁之间的儿童残骸仅讲英语。对于第三代及以后的一代,归因于儿童SES的BMI差异很小,并表现出最初的下降,随后的稳定,和只会说英语的人的最后增加;对于使用英语以外的其他语言的同龄人,随着年龄的增长,其遵循的是一种先升后降的模式。在英语水平较高的儿童中,只有英语的第三代及以上一代人的BMI值高于说其他语言的人。从20岁到58岁之间,这种关系是显而易见的;教育和收入都不能介导第二代儿童SES对BMI的影响。对于第一代,第三代及以后的一代,成人教育介导了儿童SES对BMI的影响,但这种中介仅解释了这种关系的有限部分。对于第一代移民来说,向上流动与BMI低于稳定低状态有关,但与稳定高状态没有区别。对于第二代,向上的移动性与高于稳定的高低状态的BMI有关。对于童年的第三代及以后的非英语语言,向上流动与较低的BMI有关,而不是稳定的高低雕像。结果表明,SES和文化适应共同影响移民的BMI。同时指出SES,适应度和BMI之间的复杂关系。首先,这项研究部分支持了新移民的成年成年人SES-BMI关系。其次,它表明在分析健康结果方面,成人教育比家庭收入是一种更敏感的SES度量,例如BMI。第三,该研究支持了成年早期生活经历的关键影响,这主要不是通过将其投影到成年后的SES中。无论适应水平如何,这种效果都是明显的。第四,归因于SES的健康差异在减少而不是增加,这与“老龄化”理论是一致的。第五,该研究描绘了不同年龄段移民在SES,英语水平和BMI之间的独特关系。这一发现表明语言在文化适应的各个阶段扮演着不同的角色。第六,研究表明,高度适应的移民中存在“健康的移民悖论”。该研究为移民研究领域的未来研究提供了新的起点。

著录项

  • 作者

    Zhang, Qian.;

  • 作者单位

    University of South Carolina.;

  • 授予单位 University of South Carolina.;
  • 学科 Sociology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2015
  • 页码 238 p.
  • 总页数 238
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号