Health, Chronic Conditions, and Behavioral Risk Disparities among U.S. Immigrant Children and Adolescents

Author:

Singh Gopal K.1,Yu Stella M.1,Kogan Michael D.1

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration, Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Rockville, MD

Abstract

Objective. We examined differentials in the prevalence of 23 parent-reported health, chronic condition, and behavioral indicators among 91,532 children of immigrant and U.S.-born parents. Methods. We used the 2007 National Survey of Children's Health to estimate health differentials among 10 ethnic-nativity groups. Logistic regression yielded adjusted differentials. Results. Immigrant children in each racial/ethnic group had a lower prevalence of depression and behavioral problems than native-born children The prevalence of autism varied from 0.3% among immigrant Asian children to 1.3%–1.4% among native-born non-Hispanic white and Hispanic children Immigrant children had a lower prevalence of asthma, attention deficit disorder/attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; developmental delay; learning disability; speech, hearing, and sleep problems; school absence; and ≥1 chronic condition than native-born children, with health risks increasing markedly in relation to mother's duration of residence in the U.S. Immigrant children had a substantially lower exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, with the odds of exposure being 60%–95% lower among immigrant non-Hispanic black, Asian, and Hispanic children compared with native non-Hispanic white children. Obesity prevalence ranged from 7.7% for native-born Asian children to 24.9%–25.1% for immigrant Hispanic and native-born non-Hispanic black children. Immigrant children had higher physical inactivity levels than native-born children; however, inactivity rates declined with each successive generation of immigrants. Immigrant Hispanic children were at increased risk of obesity and sedentary behaviors. Ethnic-nativity differentials in health and behavioral indicators remained marked after covariate adjustment. Conclusions. Immigrant patterns in child health and health-risk behaviors vary substantially by ethnicity, generational status, and length of time since immigration Public health programs must target at-risk children of both immigrant and U.S.-born parents.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference40 articles.

1. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration (US), Maternal and Child Health Bureau. The National Survey of Children's Health 2007 Rockville (MD): HHS; 2009.

2. Bloom B, Cohen RA, Freeman G. Summary health statistics for U.S. children: National Health Interview Survey, 2010. Vital Health Stat 10 2011(250).

3. Walters NP, Trevelyan EN. The newly arrived foreign-born population of the United States: 2010. American Community Survey Briefs. Washington: Census Bureau (US); 2011.

4. Grieco EM, Trevelyan EN. Place of birth of the foreign-born population: 2009. American Community Survey Briefs. Washington: Census Bureau (US); 2010.

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