Immigration and health / edited by Reanne Frank.
Material type:
TextSeries: Advances in medical sociology ; v. 19.Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Description: 1 online resource (xii, 307 pages)ISBN: 9781787430617 (e-book)Subject(s): Immigrants -- Health and hygiene -- United States | Immigrants -- Services for -- United States | Social Science / Emigration & Immigration | Migration, immigration & emigrationAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 362.1086912 LOC classification: RA448.5.I44 | I46 2019Online resources: Click here to access online | Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Digital Library
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RA448.5.I44 I46 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available |
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| RA440 Transitions to Professional Nursing Practice | RA440 .E38 2015 Education, social factors, and health beliefs in health and health care services | RA448.4 .H43 2012 Health disparities among under-served populations | RA448.5.I44 I46 2019 Immigration and health / | RA450.4.I53 E96 2018eb Northern and Indigenous health and healthcare / | RA527 .B37 2018 Intimate Communities | RA564.85 .C64 1998 La condición de la mujer en el espacio de la salud |
Includes index.
Prelims -- Advancing the field of immigration and health -- Cross-national perspectives -- Problematizing acculturation -- Structural approach -- Index.
The current politicized climate around immigration includes heated debate over the potential costs of continued immigration for the health and well-being of the nation. Amid the controversy one pattern that has escaped significant notice is that immigrants today are healthier than the native-born. Even more striking is that these positive health profiles are found among those immigrants who tend to have less education and lower income, factors that population health researchers have typically associated with poor health. A final feature of contemporary immigrant health is evidence of a gradual loss of the immigrant health advantage with time in the U.S. and across generations. These paradoxical patterns lie at the center of Volume 19 of Advances in Medical Sociology. Too often, immigrant health is set apart and treated as a specialty research area rather than as a topic that is central to understanding such core sociological concepts as stratification and inequality. The contributors in this volume all leverage a population health perspective to help unravel the patterns and paradoxes of immigrant health, and in doing so, help to clarify more broadly how health dis-parities emerge and persist in the contemporary U.S.
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