http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/sn_arc98/9_19_98/fob1.htm SCIENCE NEWS ONLINE September 19, 1998 References & Sources Immigrants Go from Health to Worse By B. Bower People from around the world flock to the United States expecting to find a better life. But to scientists' surprise, a growing body of evidence indicates that increasing familiarity with U.S. culture and society renders immigrants and their children far more susceptible to many mental and physical ailments, even if they attain financial success. The latest study of this phenomenon, directed by epidemiologist William A. Vega of the University of Texas, San Antonio finds much higher rates of major depression, substance abuse, and other mental disorders in U.S.born Mexican-Americans compared with both recent and long-standing Mexican-American immigrants. This pattern held regardless of education or income levels. Vega's results, published in the September Archives of General Psychiatry, appear at the same time as the release of a national report on declining physical and mental health in children of immigrant families. A panel convened by the National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine, both in Washington, D.C., reviewed previous studies and concluded that assimilation into a U.S. lifestyle may undermine the overall health of immigrant children much more than being poor does. In contrast, studies of nonimmigrant U.S. residents usually link poverty to poor physical and mental health. "The material on immigrant health shocked me when we first reviewed it," says panel member Arthur M. Kleinman, a psychiatrist and anthropologist at Harvard Medical School in Boston. "Vega's study is consistent with the panel's conclusion that immigrants' health deteriorates with assimilation to U.S. society," declining toward general U.S. norms, says Kleinman. Other studies have indicated that citizens of many countries, including Mexico, are healthier overall than U.S. citizens. Vega's team interviewed 3,012 adults of Mexican origin, ages 18 to 59, living in Fresno County, Calif. Of that number, 1,810 people identified themselves as immigrants. Interviews were in English or Spanish. Interviewers expressed an interest in health issues only and tried to minimize any tendency of participants to liedue to U.S. residency concernsabout having immigrated. Nearly one-half of U.S.born Mexican-Americans had suffered from at least one of 12 psychiatric disorders at some time in their lives, compared with only one-quarter of the immigrants. Common mental conditions in U.S.born individuals included major depression, phobias and other anxiety disorders, and substance abuse and dependence. Prevalence rates for mental disorders were lowest for those who had immigrated within the past 13 years. The higher rates found among immigrants of 13 or more years still fell considerably below those for the native-born group. Immigrants may constitute a hardy group willing to carve out new lives in a foreign land. However, immigrants in Vega's study showed mental-disorder rates similar to those of Mexico City residents. A related study of 1,500 public health care users in California, conducted by psychiatrist Javier I. Escobar of the RWJ Medical School in Piscataway, N.J., reports lower rates of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, as well as better physical health, in Mexican and Central American immigrants than in U.S.born Hispanics. Nonetheless, immigrants were poorer than the U.S. natives, Escobar's team reports in an upcoming British Journal of Psychiatry. Physical and mental health advantages for immigrant families vanish by the third generation of children born in the United States, according to the panel report. Reasons for the initial strength and later decline of immigrants' health are not clear, says Vega's group. Close-knit extended families and cultural injunctions to eat nutritious foods and avoid drugs and divorce may safeguard the health of recent immigrants from Mexico, Escobar suggests. Increasing social isolation and the loss of stable religious affiliations may later herald health declines, Kleinman proposes. From Science News, Vol. 154, No. 12, September 19, 1998, p. 180. Copyright 1998 by Science Service. References: 1998. From generation to generation: The health and well-being of children in immigrant families. National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine Report. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Escobar, J.I. 1998. Immigration and mental health. Archives of General Psychiatry 55(September):781. Vega, W.A., et al. 1998. Lifetime prevalence of DSM-III-R psychiatric disorders among urban and rural Mexican Americans in California. Archives of General Psychiatry 55(September):771. Sources: Javier I. Escobar University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey Department of Psychiatry Robert Wood Johnson Medical School Piscataway, NJ 08854-5635 William A. Vega University of Texas, San Antonio Metropolitan Research and Policy Institute San Antonio Downtown Campus 501 West Durango Boulevard San Antonio, TX 78207 * Back to Top * Table of Contents * Home Page * Past Issues * Address Changes * Features * Subscribe * Feedback * Search! * Order Back Issues copyright 1998 ScienceService Back to MGM primer http://www.math.missouri.edu/~rich/MGM/primer.html