Immigration, Educational Attainment, and Subjective Health in the United States.

Rifath Ara Alam Barsha, Babak Najand, Hossein Zare, Shervin Assari
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Abstract

Objectives: Although educational attainment is a major social determinant of health, according to Marginalization-related Diminished Returns (MDRs), the effect of education tends to be weaker for marginalized groups compared to the privileged groups. While we know more about marginalization due to race and ethnicity, limited information is available on MDRs of educational attainment among US immigrant individuals.

Aims: This study compared immigrant and non-immigrant US adults aged 18 and over for the effects of educational attainment on subjective health (self-rated health; SRH).

Methods: Data came from General Social Survey (GSS) that recruited a nationally representative sample of US adults from 1972 to 2022. Overall, GSS has enrolled 45,043 individuals who were either immigrant (4,247; 9.4%) and non-immigrant (40,796; 90.6%). The independent variable was educational attainment, the dependent variable was SRH (measured with a single item), confounders were age, gender, race, employment and marital status, and moderator was immigration (nativity) status.

Results: Higher educational attainment was associated with higher odds of good SRH (odds ratio OR = 2.08 for 12 years of education, OR = 2.81 for 13-15 years of education, OR = 4.38 for college graduation, and OR = 4.83 for graduate studies). However, we found significant statistical interaction between immigration status and college graduation on SRH, which was indicative of smaller association between college graduation and SRH for immigrant than non-immigrant US adults.

Conclusions: In line with MDRs, the association between educational attainment and SRH was weaker for immigrant than non-immigrant. It is essential to implement two sets of policies to achieve health inequalities among immigrant populations: policies that increase educational attainment of immigrants and those that increase the health returns of educational attainment for immigrants.

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美国的移民、教育程度和主观健康状况。
目标:尽管受教育程度是健康的一个主要社会决定因素,但根据边缘化相关收益递减(MDRs)理论,与特权群体相比,教育对边缘化群体的影响往往较弱。虽然我们对种族和民族造成的边缘化有更多了解,但有关美国移民受教育程度的 MDRs 信息却很有限:数据来自 1972 年至 2022 年期间对美国成年人进行的具有全国代表性的抽样调查(GSS)。总体而言,GSS 共登记了 45,043 人,其中有移民(4,247 人,占 9.4%)和非移民(40,796 人,占 90.6%)。自变量是受教育程度,因变量是性健康和生殖健康(用一个项目衡量),混杂因素是年龄、性别、种族、就业和婚姻状况,调节因素是移民(原籍)身份:教育程度越高,性健康和生殖健康状况越好的几率越高(12 年教育程度的几率比为 2.08,13-15 年教育程度的几率比为 2.81,大学毕业的几率比为 4.38,研究生毕业的几率比为 4.83)。然而,我们发现移民身份与大学毕业对性健康和生殖健康的影响在统计学上有明显的交互作用,这表明与非移民相比,移民美国成年人的大学毕业与性健康和生殖健康之间的关系较小:结论:与 MDRs 一致,移民受教育程度与性健康和生殖健康之间的关系弱于非移民。必须实施两套政策来实现移民人口的健康不平等:提高移民受教育程度的政策和提高移民受教育程度的健康回报的政策。
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