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Neighborhood Ethnic Composition and Self-rated Health Among Chinese and Vietnamese American Immigrants

Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, ISSN: 1557-1920, Vol: 23, Issue: 3, Page: 574-582
2021
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Article Description

Immigrants tend to live in areas with higher co-ethnic density, and the effect of neighborhood ethnic composition could be particularly salient for health. This study explored associations between neighborhood ethnic composition and self-rated health among Asian immigrants. We analyzed data collected at baseline from 670 Chinese and Vietnamese immigrants enrolled in a lifestyle intervention trial. Residential addresses were geocoded and combined with neighborhood socio-demographic profiles based on census data. We used generalized estimating equations to examine neighborhood ethnic composition and self-rated health. Independent of individual-level factors, living in neighborhoods more densely populated by whites was associated with poor/fair self-rated health. Neighborhood household income and density of participants’ own ethnic group were not associated with poor/fair self-rated health. More research is warranted to disentangle reasons why Chinese and Vietnamese immigrants living in white-concentrated neighborhoods reported poorer self-rated health, including investigating effects of discrimination, relative deprivation, and availability of social resources.

Bibliographic Details

Guan, Alice; Kim-Mozeleski, Jin E; Vyas, Priyanka; Stewart, Susan L; Gildengorin, Ginny; Burke, Nancy J; Ma, Kris; Pham, Amber T; Tan, Judy; Lu, Qian; McPhee, Stephen J; Tsoh, Janice Y

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Medicine

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