Paradox lost: Explaining the hispanic adult mortality advantage
University of Wisconsin–Madison · National Center for Health Statistics
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Abstract
We tested three competing hypotheses regarding the adult "Hispanic mortality paradox": data artifact, migration, and cultural or social buffering effects. On the basis of a series of parametric hazard models estimated on nine years of mortality follow-up data, our results suggest that the "Hispanic" mortality advantage is a feature found only among foreign-born Mexicans and foreign-born Hispanics other than Cubans or Puerto Ricans. Our analysis suggests that the foreign-born Mexican advantage can be attributed to return migration, or the "salmon-bias" effect. However, we were unable to account for the mortality advantage observed among other foreign-born Hispanics.
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2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Foreign born
- Demography
- Mortality rate
- Population
- Geography
- Medicine
- Sociology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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