Three essays on the economics of immigration and health

This thesis analyzes different sources of disparities in health and access to care among immigrants and ethnic minorities in the United States. The first chapter studies the generational worsening observed in the birth outcomes of Hispanics in the United States. Despite their lower socio-economic s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Giuntella, Giovanni Osea
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15451
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-15451
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-154512019-01-08T15:37:41Z Three essays on the economics of immigration and health Giuntella, Giovanni Osea Economics This thesis analyzes different sources of disparities in health and access to care among immigrants and ethnic minorities in the United States. The first chapter studies the generational worsening observed in the birth outcomes of Hispanics in the United States. Despite their lower socio-economic status, Hispanic immigrants in the United States initially have better health outcomes than natives. However, while their socio-economic status improves over time and across generations, their health deteriorates. This phenomenon is commonly known as the "Hispanic health paradox.'' There is an open debate about whether the observed convergence is explained by selection on health or by the adoption of less healthy lifestyles. This paper uses a unique dataset linking the birth records of two generations of Hispanics born in California and Florida (1975-2009), to analyze the mechanisms behind the generational decline in birth outcomes. The second chapter (joint with Emily R. Gee) investigates the role of ethnic networks and the effect of providing online information in foreign-language in facilitating Medicaid take-up among immigrants in the US. Many low-income immigrants are uninsured yet eligible for public health insurance. In this paper, we examine whether language barriers and network effects can explain disparities in insurance Medicaid participation. Using the 2008 and 2009 American Community Survey, we show that linguistic networks facilitate Medicaid enrolment among non-English speaking adults. The third chapter analyzes the effect of food-environment on maternal weight gain and pregnancy outcomes. This paper studies how changes in the quality of food environment affect maternal and child health. Similarly to Currie et al. (2009), I use mother fixed-effects and exploit over time variation in the proximity to different set of restaurants. Results show that proximity to Mexican restaurants is associated with a lower likelihood of excessive weight gain among US born mothers. 2016-04-07T14:59:55Z 2016-04-07T14:59:55Z 2013 2016-04-07T01:14:13Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15451 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Economics
spellingShingle Economics
Giuntella, Giovanni Osea
Three essays on the economics of immigration and health
description This thesis analyzes different sources of disparities in health and access to care among immigrants and ethnic minorities in the United States. The first chapter studies the generational worsening observed in the birth outcomes of Hispanics in the United States. Despite their lower socio-economic status, Hispanic immigrants in the United States initially have better health outcomes than natives. However, while their socio-economic status improves over time and across generations, their health deteriorates. This phenomenon is commonly known as the "Hispanic health paradox.'' There is an open debate about whether the observed convergence is explained by selection on health or by the adoption of less healthy lifestyles. This paper uses a unique dataset linking the birth records of two generations of Hispanics born in California and Florida (1975-2009), to analyze the mechanisms behind the generational decline in birth outcomes. The second chapter (joint with Emily R. Gee) investigates the role of ethnic networks and the effect of providing online information in foreign-language in facilitating Medicaid take-up among immigrants in the US. Many low-income immigrants are uninsured yet eligible for public health insurance. In this paper, we examine whether language barriers and network effects can explain disparities in insurance Medicaid participation. Using the 2008 and 2009 American Community Survey, we show that linguistic networks facilitate Medicaid enrolment among non-English speaking adults. The third chapter analyzes the effect of food-environment on maternal weight gain and pregnancy outcomes. This paper studies how changes in the quality of food environment affect maternal and child health. Similarly to Currie et al. (2009), I use mother fixed-effects and exploit over time variation in the proximity to different set of restaurants. Results show that proximity to Mexican restaurants is associated with a lower likelihood of excessive weight gain among US born mothers.
author Giuntella, Giovanni Osea
author_facet Giuntella, Giovanni Osea
author_sort Giuntella, Giovanni Osea
title Three essays on the economics of immigration and health
title_short Three essays on the economics of immigration and health
title_full Three essays on the economics of immigration and health
title_fullStr Three essays on the economics of immigration and health
title_full_unstemmed Three essays on the economics of immigration and health
title_sort three essays on the economics of immigration and health
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15451
work_keys_str_mv AT giuntellagiovanniosea threeessaysontheeconomicsofimmigrationandhealth
_version_ 1718811238877626368