Does the Hispanic Paradox in U.S. Adult Mortality Extend to Disability?

被引:0
|
作者
Mark D. Hayward
Robert A. Hummer
Chi-Tsun Chiu
César González-González
Rebeca Wong
机构
[1] University of Texas at Austin,Population Research Center and Department of Sociology
[2] Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School,undefined
[3] National Institute of Geriatrics,undefined
[4] University of Texas Medical Branch,undefined
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关键词
Hispanic paradox; Disability; Mortality; Disabled life expectancy; Nativity;
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摘要
Studies consistently document a Hispanic paradox in U.S. adult mortality, whereby Hispanics have similar or lower mortality rates than non-Hispanic whites despite lower socioeconomic status. This study extends this line of inquiry to disability, especially among foreign-born Hispanics, since their advantaged mortality seemingly should be paired with health advantages more generally. We also assess whether the paradox extends to U.S.-born Hispanics to evaluate the effect of nativity. We calculate multistate life tables of life expectancy with disability to assess whether racial/ethnic and nativity differences in the length of disability-free life parallel differences in overall life expectancy. Our results document a Hispanic paradox in mortality for foreign-born and U.S.-born Hispanics. However, Hispanics’ low mortality rates are not matched by low disability rates. Their disability rates are substantially higher than those of non-Hispanic whites and generally similar to those of non-Hispanic blacks. The result is a protracted period of disabled life expectancy for Hispanics, both foreign- and U.S.-born.
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页码:81 / 96
页数:15
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