Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants
Health and migration are interrelated processes. This dissertation focuses on the case of Mexico to study the reciprocal relationship between migration and health by examining health selection among return US migrants and internal migrants and whether health trajectories change as a result of migrat...
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ndltd-VANDERBILT-oai-VANDERBILTETD-etd-03262018-1954332018-03-30T05:19:03Z Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants Leon-Perez, Gabriela Sociology Health and migration are interrelated processes. This dissertation focuses on the case of Mexico to study the reciprocal relationship between migration and health by examining health selection among return US migrants and internal migrants and whether health trajectories change as a result of migration. This study was motivated by three research question. First, does the health of return US migrants improve or worsen as a result of migration, and does this change differ from that of non-migrants? Second, does internal migration produce different health trajectories relative to staying in the community of origin, and does it vary for men and women? Third, does internal migration shape the health disparities between the Mexican indigenous and non-indigenous populations? Using longitudinal data from the Mexican Family Life Survey, I estimated linear growth curves to assess migrantsâ and non-migrantsâ initial health status and changes in health over time. All analyses focused on overall health (measured by self-rated health) as the outcome of interest. Taken together, the findings from this dissertation provide evidence of the reciprocal relationship between health and migration, but also reveal that this relationship operates differently based on the destination and on the specific migrant population. Overall, I found similar patterns among return US migrants and indigenous internal migrants: both groups exhibited evidence of positive health selection relative to their non-migrant counterparts and both experienced a similar trend of health deterioration after migration. Internal migrants, on the other hand, were not significantly different from non-migrants in initial health or changes in health. The findings also underscore the reality that migrants are not a homogenous group. As an aggregate group, Mexican internal migrants were not positively selected on health and migration did not appear to have an independent effect on their health trajectories. However, this finding obscures the experiences of ethnic minorities. By disaggregating internal migrants and investigating the particular experiences of indigenous Mexicans, I uncovered significant health selection and evidence of health deterioration among a subset of internal migrants. Findings about the deterioration in the health of return migrants and indigenous migrants have implications for the Mexican health care system. Dr. Christy L. Erving Dr. Katharine M. Donato Dr. C. Andre Christie-Mizell Dr. Evelyn J. Patterson Dr. Stephanie M. DiPietro VANDERBILT 2018-03-29 text application/pdf http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-03262018-195433/ http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-03262018-195433/ en restricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to Vanderbilt University or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report. |
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Sociology Leon-Perez, Gabriela Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants |
description |
Health and migration are interrelated processes. This dissertation focuses on the case of Mexico to study the reciprocal relationship between migration and health by examining health selection among return US migrants and internal migrants and whether health trajectories change as a result of migration. This study was motivated by three research question. First, does the health of return US migrants improve or worsen as a result of migration, and does this change differ from that of non-migrants? Second, does internal migration produce different health trajectories relative to staying in the community of origin, and does it vary for men and women? Third, does internal migration shape the health disparities between the Mexican indigenous and non-indigenous populations? Using longitudinal data from the Mexican Family Life Survey, I estimated linear growth curves to assess migrantsâ and non-migrantsâ initial health status and changes in health over time. All analyses focused on overall health (measured by self-rated health) as the outcome of interest. Taken together, the findings from this dissertation provide evidence of the reciprocal relationship between health and migration, but also reveal that this relationship operates differently based on the destination and on the specific migrant population. Overall, I found similar patterns among return US migrants and indigenous internal migrants: both groups exhibited evidence of positive health selection relative to their non-migrant counterparts and both experienced a similar trend of health deterioration after migration. Internal migrants, on the other hand, were not significantly different from non-migrants in initial health or changes in health. The findings also underscore the reality that migrants are not a homogenous group. As an aggregate group, Mexican internal migrants were not positively selected on health and migration did not appear to have an independent effect on their health trajectories. However, this finding obscures the experiences of ethnic minorities. By disaggregating internal migrants and investigating the particular experiences of indigenous Mexicans, I uncovered significant health selection and evidence of health deterioration among a subset of internal migrants. Findings about the deterioration in the health of return migrants and indigenous migrants have implications for the Mexican health care system. |
author2 |
Dr. Christy L. Erving |
author_facet |
Dr. Christy L. Erving Leon-Perez, Gabriela |
author |
Leon-Perez, Gabriela |
author_sort |
Leon-Perez, Gabriela |
title |
Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants |
title_short |
Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants |
title_full |
Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants |
title_fullStr |
Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants |
title_full_unstemmed |
Health and Migration Within and Across Borders: A Longitudinal Study of Mexican Internal Migrants and Return US Migrants |
title_sort |
health and migration within and across borders: a longitudinal study of mexican internal migrants and return us migrants |
publisher |
VANDERBILT |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-03262018-195433/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT leonperezgabriela healthandmigrationwithinandacrossbordersalongitudinalstudyofmexicaninternalmigrantsandreturnusmigrants |
_version_ |
1718617526937583616 |