Unraveling the Hispanic Health Paradox

Author:

Fernandez José1,García-Pérez Mónica2,Orozco-Aleman Sandra3

Affiliation:

1. José Fernandez is Associate Professor of Economics, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky.

2. Mónica García-Pérez is Professor of Economics, St. Cloud State University, St. Cloud, Minnesota.

3. Sandra Orozco-Aleman is Associate Professor of Economics, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi.

Abstract

In 2019, Hispanics in the US had a life expectancy advantage of 3.0 years and 7.1 years over non-Hispanic Whites and non-Hispanic Blacks, respectively, despite having real-household income values 26 percentage points lower than Non-Hispanic White households. Hispanics appear to have equal or even better health outcomes relative to non-Hispanic Whites across various health measures. This is known as the Hispanic health paradox. This paper underscores the importance of disaggregating Hispanics by ancestry and age profile when discussing the paradox across key health outcomes. It also provides an overview of the leading explanations, such as the salmon bias and the healthy immigrant effect. Further, it highlights the role of healthcare access and usage in this discussion. Ignoring these sources of bias have important consequences for how morbidity and mortality among Hispanics are measured within widely used national datasets.

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Ocean Engineering

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