Do Mexican immigrants “import” social gradients in health behaviors to the US?
CCPR-057-08
Abstract
Greater educational attainment is consistently associated with lower mortality rates and better health behaviors in the US, a pattern known as the social gradient in health. However, recent research suggests that Mexican-origin adults in the US have weak or flat gradients, in contrast to steep gradients for non-Hispanic whites. In this study we evaluate one possible explanation for this finding: that the relative weakness of education gradients in health behaviors observed among Mexican-origin adults in the US is due to weak gradients in the sending population. We test this “imported gradients” hypothesis with data from two large nationally-representative datasets: the US National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the Mexican National Health Survey (ENSA 2000). We compare the education gradients in smoking and obesity for recentlyarrived Mexican immigrants in the US to the corresponding gradients in high-migration regions of Mexico. Results partially support the imported gradients hypothesis and have implications for health education and promotion programs targeted to immigrant populations to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in health in the US.