Demography
Volume 52, Issue 4, 2015, Pages 1295-1320
Epidemiological Paradox or Immigrant Vulnerability? Obesity Among Young Children of Immigrants (Article)
Baker E.H.* ,
Rendall M.S. ,
Weden M.M.
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a
University of Alabama at Birmingham, HHB 460F, 1720 2nd Avenue S., Birmingham, AL 35294, United States, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, United States
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b
University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, United States
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c
RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, United States
Abstract
According to the “immigrant epidemiological paradox,” immigrants and their children enjoy health advantages over their U.S.-born peers—advantages that diminish with greater acculturation. We investigated child obesity as a potentially significant deviation from this paradox for second-generation immigrant children. We evaluated two alternate measures of mother’s acculturation: age at arrival in the United States and English language proficiency. To obtain sufficient numbers of second-generation immigrant children, we pooled samples across two related, nationally representative surveys. Each included measured (not parent-reported) height and weight of kindergartners. We also estimated models that alternately included and excluded mother’s pre-pregnancy weight status as a predictor. Our findings are opposite to those predicted by the immigrant epidemiological paradox: children of U.S.-born mothers were less likely to be obese than otherwise similar children of foreign-born mothers; and the children of the least-acculturated immigrant mothers, as measured by low English language proficiency, were the most likely to be obese. Foreign-born mothers had lower (healthier) pre-pregnancy weight than U.S.-born mothers, and this was protective against their second-generation children’s obesity. This protection, however, was not sufficiently strong to outweigh factors associated or correlated with the mothers’ linguistic isolation and marginal status as immigrants. © 2015, Population Association of America.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84938951912&doi=10.1007%2fs13524-015-0404-3&partnerID=40&md5=e19410404713bc701725a6a56a270c40
DOI: 10.1007/s13524-015-0404-3
ISSN: 00703370
Cited by: 14
Original Language: English