AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the Racial Context Hypothesis by investigating the health outcomes of U.S.-born Black Americans compared to Black immigrants based on their regions of origin.
  • Using data from the National Health Interview Survey (2000-2018), the researchers focused on various health measures like self-rated health and chronic conditions among 212,269 participants.
  • Findings indicate that Black immigrants from racially mixed and majority-Black backgrounds generally report better health outcomes than U.S.-born Black Americans, whereas those from predominantly White regions show no significant health differences.

Article Abstract

Objective: We test the Racial Context Hypothesis by examining the association between racial context of origin and five physical health outcomes (self-rated health, activity limitation, functional activity limitation, lifetime hypertension, and lifetime cancer) among U.S.-born Black Americans and Black immigrants in the United States.

Design: This cross-sectional study used 2000 through 2018 waves of the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Our subsample was limited to adults 18 years of age or older who self-identified as Black and selected a distinct global region of birth if not U.S. born (N = 212,269). We employed zero-order logistic regression models to estimate the relationships between each measure of health and racial context by region of birth.

Results: Supporting the Racial Context Hypothesis, we found Black immigrants from racially mixed (Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, South America) and majority-Black contexts (Africa) had lower odds of being in fair or poor self-rated health [aOR 0.786; 0.616; 0.611], reporting any activity limitation [aOR = 0.537; 0.369; 0.678], reporting functional activity limitation [aOR 0.619; 0.425; 0.678], reporting lifetime hypertension diagnosis [aOR 0.596; 0.543; 0.618], and reporting lifetime cancer diagnosis [aOR 0.771; 0.326; 0.641] compared to U.S.-born Black Americans. After controlling for sociodemographic and socioeconomic covariates, Black immigrants from majority-White contexts (Europe) did not significantly differ from U.S.-born Black Americans on these five physical health measures.

Conclusion: This study expands our understanding of the "Black immigrant advantage" by showing that Black immigrants from predominantly Black and racially mixed regions rated their health status as poor or fair less often, experienced less activity or functional activity limitations, and had a lower risk of lifetime hypertension and cancer compared to U.S.-born Black Americans. The significant associations persisted even after controlling for sociodemographic and socioeconomic characteristics. Black immigrant health is not homogenous, and the racial context of origin Black immigrants come from has an association with their health outcomes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40615-024-02167-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

black immigrants
24
racial context
24
activity limitation
16
us-born black
16
black americans
16
black
13
physical health
12
context hypothesis
12
functional activity
12
lifetime hypertension
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!