Expanding Access to Medical Care Services to Undocumented New York City Residents Without Health Insurance: Reflections on the ActionHealthNYC Study

2021 ◽  
Vol 111 (7) ◽  
pp. 1186-1188
Author(s):  
Sean J. Haley
2021 ◽  
pp. 003335492110075
Author(s):  
Claudia Chernov ◽  
Lisa Wang ◽  
Lorna E. Thorpe ◽  
Nadia Islam ◽  
Amy Freeman ◽  
...  

Objectives Immigrant adults tend to have better health than native-born adults despite lower incomes, but the health advantage decreases with length of residence. To determine whether immigrant adults have a health advantage over US-born adults in New York City, we compared cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors among both groups. Methods Using data from the New York City Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2013-2014, we assessed health insurance coverage, health behaviors, and health conditions, comparing adults ages ≥20 born in the 50 states or the District of Columbia (US-born) with adults born in a US territory or outside the United States (immigrants, following the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey) and comparing US-born adults with (1) adults who immigrated recently (≤10 years) and (2) adults who immigrated earlier (>10 years). Results For immigrant adults, the mean time since arrival in the United States was 21.8 years. Immigrant adults were significantly more likely than US-born adults to lack health insurance (22% vs 12%), report fair or poor health (26% vs 17%), have hypertension (30% vs 23%), and have diabetes (20% vs 11%) but significantly less likely to smoke (18% vs 27%) (all P < .05). Comparable proportions of immigrant adults and US-born adults were overweight or obese (67% vs 63%) and reported CVD (both 7%). Immigrant adults who arrived recently were less likely than immigrant adults who arrived earlier to have diabetes or high cholesterol but did not differ overall from US-born adults. Conclusions Our findings may help guide prevention programs and policy efforts to ensure that immigrant adults remain healthy.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1962 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1015-1017

Postgraduate Course The American College of Allergists Graduate Instructional Course and Nineteenth Annual Congress will be held March 24-29, 1963, Americana of New York, New York City. For further information, write to John D. Gillaspie, M.D. Treasurer, 2141 14th Street, Boulder, Colorado. Fellowships in Psychologic Aspects of Medical Care of Children The Harriet Lane Home of the Johns Hopkins Hospital announces the availability of Fellowships to provide training in the psychologic aspects of the medical care of children. Candidates should have completed 2 years of pediatric residency beyond the internship.


2012 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-114
Author(s):  
Tina Takemoto

Editor's Note: In this previously unpublished conversation from 2007, Tina Takemoto and Angela Ellsworth discuss their collaboration during a period when Ellsworth was diagnosed with and underwent treatment for Hodgkin's lymphoma. For those compelling collaborations, the artists confronted the effects of diagnosis and prognosis on the experience of embodiment, the gendered and racialized practices of medical care, and the limits of empathy in communicating across illness/health. In this conversation, Takemoto and Ellsworth reconvene after a crisis in their collaborations to work through the complications that arose for each in their attempts to stage and manage performances that would make a difference in the treatment of cancer. This interview was conducted in New York City on 16 September 2007.


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