Health disparities in the Latino population

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Vega, William
Rodriguez, Michael
Gruskin, Elisabeth
Publisher
Oxford Academic
Date
August 2009
Publication
Epidemiologic Reviews
Abstract / Description

In this review, the authors provide an approach to the study of health disparities in the US Latino population and evaluate the evidence, using mortality rates for discrete medical conditions and the total US population as a standard for comparison. They examine the demographic structure of the Latino population and how nativity, age, income, and education are related to observed patterns of health and mortality. A key issue discussed is how to interpret the superior mortality indices of Latino immigrants and the subsequent declining health status of later generations. Explanations for differences in mortality include selection, reverse selection, death record inconsistencies, inequalities in health status, transnational migration, social marginality, and adaptation to environmental conditions in the United States. The utility of the public health social inequality framework and the status syndrome for explaining Latino disparities is discussed. The authors examine excess mortality from 8 causes: diabetes, stomach cancer, liver cancer, cervical cancer, human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, liver disease, homicide, and work-related injuries. The impact of intergenerational changes in health behavior within the Latino population and the contributory role of suboptimal health care are interpreted in the context of implications for future research, public health programs, and policies. (author abstract)

Artifact Type
Application
Reference Type
Journal Article
Priority Population
Migrants, immigrants, and refugees
P4HE Authored
No
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Chronic Disease » Co-Morbidities
Social/Structural Determinants » Isms and Phobias » Xenophobia