Immigrants Outlive Native Americans
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, May 26, 2004
SAN FRANCISCO Immigrants who come to the United States
live an average of three years longer than people born here, new
research shows in a surprising finding that challenges common
beliefs.
A growing body of evidence indicates the life span difference
reflects immigrants' innate vitality and their reluctance to
embrace Americans' drive-through, drive-everywhere mentality. They
also smoke less.
The deficit in life expectancy is true for all races but is most
dramatic among blacks. Immigrant black men live nine years longer
than black men born in the United States, according to an analysis
by a National Institutes of Health researcher.
The study reviewed millions of death and health records from
1986-94. Though the numbers are old, more limited studies of recent
data suggest the same patterns hold true, although life expectancy
is generally rising.
The records showed the average American-born black man could
expect to reach 64, while a black man born overseas would likely
live beyond 73 if he immigrated. If the man never left the African
country where he was born, he might well have died before his 50th
birthday.
Perhaps most astonishing is that immigrants outlive the
U.S.-born population even though they're more likely to be poor and
less likely to see a doctor, often a prescription for a shorter
life.
Such results may seem counterintuitive, but their explanation
makes sense.
Lifestyle is a powerful factor. Black immigrants are three times
less likely to smoke than American-born blacks, according to NIH
research, and far less likely to be obese. Black immigrants drink
less and exercise more, according to other federal research.
It is not surprising, then, that national health statistics show
black immigrants are far less likely than U.S.-born blacks to die
of everything from lung cancer to liver cirrhosis.
Obesity, too, is far more prevalent among American-born
residents. Data from the mid-1990s showed that 22 percent of adult
immigrants were obese, compared to 28 percent of U.S.-born adults.
(Recent numbers suggest about 30 percent of all U.S. residents are
obese.)
The smoking numbers were even more dramatic: 18 percent of
immigrants smoked, compared to 26 percent of U.S.-born adults.
There are other factors, too, experts say: Immigrants are likely
the most physically active, vigorous citizens in their homelands.
They must be resilient to journey here and spread roots. They tend
to benefit from stress-reducing social support networks and an
outlook that, even when poor, they're better off than before.
Some doctors have long suspected that immigrants live longer.
But the findings surprise some immigrant advocates who focus more
on federal policies other than health.
"People have a misconception that immigrants have poorer
health, but when you look at the empirical data ... you almost
always find they do better than their U.S.-born counterparts,"
says Gopal K. Singh, an NIH statistician. His research, published
this month in the Canadian Journal of Public Health, reported that
immigrant life expectancy surpassed 78, while U.S.-born life
expectancy hovered at 75. (Current U.S. life expectancy is more than 77
years.)
Singh found that immigrants tend to live longer, regardless of
race. The difference is greatest among blacks and Hispanics, who
have nearly a four-year gap between immigrants and native-born.
Implicated to a lesser extent are whites and Asians/Pacific
Islanders, the group with the longest life expectancy.
Going Native Is Bad for Your Health
As they assimilate, however, many immigrants adopt bad health
habits. Research by Singh and others suggest that, over time,
immigrants behave like the American-born population: More smoke,
drink and gain weight.
"Assimilation often means assimilation into eating too much
Cheez Whiz," says Mark Krikorian, executive director Center for
Immigration Studies.
In the end, however, immigrants appear to pass on to their
children some of the health advantages they enjoy. Not that it's a
piece of cake.
"There is tension over giving their child what they want -
chips, fries or soda - when they know that's not the best thing to
be eating," says Dr. Elena Fuentes-Afflick, an associate professor
at the University of California, San Francisco, and pediatrician at
the city's main public hospital.
Parents such as Mexican-born Gricelda Aguilar must brace their
own impulses against pressures to indulge their kids, who see
classmates relishing fast food.
"I prefer to prepare food in the home, like my mama taught
me," the mother of four says as she waits at San Francisco General
Hospital for a doctor to diagnose her daughter's stomachache.
The fact that Aguilar's 15-year-old, Marili, is seeing a doctor
is itself unusual. Just 26 percent of low-income Hispanic kids who
aren't U.S. citizens have health care, according to Henry J.
Kaiser Family Foundation.
As when she grew up, Aguilar grows essential ingredients,
including corn and lettuce, in a garden patch at her home. A
typical dinner of rice, beans, chicken and salad has something like
600 calories, nutritionists estimate. A hamburger-fries-and-soda
splurge at Denny's or Sizzler like her U.S.-born daughter of 12
enjoys would tally a few hundred extra calories.
In part because of her diet, Mexican-born women like Aguilar can
expect to live past 83, according to new data from the Public
Policy Institute of California. Their U.S.-born daughters can
expect to die before reaching 82.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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