县和州移民政策对移民家庭参加补充营养援助计划的影响

IF 3.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Migration and Health Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100224
Sofia Argibay , Amy H. Auchincloss , M. Pia Chaparro , Caroline Kravitz , Alexandra Eastus , Brent A. Langellier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:与非移民相比,有资格参与补充营养援助计划(SNAP)的低收入移民参与率较低。如果移民家庭所居住的地区制定了让他们融入社会并保护他们不被驱逐出境的政策,那么他们可能更有可能参加 SNAP。调查结果显示,在过去 12 个月中,是否有家庭成员领取过 SNAP。移民政策暴露来自两个来源:一个是州移民政策资源(State Immigration Policy Resource),其中包括 18 项移民定罪和融合政策;另一个是确定 "庇护政策"(SP)的数据库,我们对其进行了县级汇总。多变量逻辑回归对个人/家庭层面和地区层面的混杂因素进行了调整。结果与生活在没有庇护政策的地区相比,生活在有庇护政策的地区参加 SNAP 的几率要高出 21%(调整后的几率比 [aOR] 1.21,95% CI=1.11,1.31)。相对于对移民最不友好的州,生活在对移民最友好的州的人加入 SNAP 的几率要高出 16%(aOR=1.16,95%CI=1.06-1.28)。当对 SP 和州一级的移民友好政策环境进行交叉分类时,生活在有一项和两项政策环境的辖区内的人参与 SNAP 的几率分别比没有两项政策环境的人高 23% 和 26%(aOR 1.23;CI 1.12-1.36;aOR 1.26;CI 1.15-1.37)。欢迎和保护移民的政策可以减少登记不足的情况。
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Impact of county and state immigration policies on immigrant household enrollment in the supplemental nutrition assistance program

Introduction

Low-income immigrants who are eligible to participate in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) participate at lower rates compared to non-immigrants. Immigrant households may be more likely to participate in SNAP if they live in areas with policies that integrate them into society and protect them from deportation.

Methods

Data on low-income immigrant households came from the 2019 American Community Survey (N = 87,678). The outcome was whether any household member received SNAP in the previous 12 months. Immigrant policy exposures came from two sources: the State Immigration Policy Resource, which includes 18 immigrant criminalizing and integrating policies, and a database that identified ‘sanctuary policies’ (SP), which we summarized at the county level. Multivariable logistic regression adjusted for person/household-level and area-level confounders.

Results

Living in a jurisdiction with a SP was associated with 21% higher odds of enrolling in SNAP compared to living in a jurisdiction without a SP (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.21, 95% CI=1.11,1.31). Relative to the least immigrant friendly states, living in the most immigrant-friendly states was associated with 16% higher odds of SNAP enrollment (aOR=1.16, 95%CI=1.06–1.28). When SP and state-level immigrant friendly policy environment were cross-classified, SNAP participation was 23% and 26% higher for those living in jurisdictions with one- and both- exposures, respectively, relative to those with neither (aOR 1.23; CI 1.12,1.36; aOR 1.26; CI 1.15,1.37).

Conclusions

Many at high risk of food insecurity – including immigrants and citizens in households with immigrants – are eligible for SNAP but under-enroll. Policies that welcome and safeguard immigrants could reduce under enrollment.

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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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