Journal articles on the topic 'Mexican Family Life Survey'

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1

Rubalcava, Luis N., Graciela M. Teruel, Duncan Thomas, and Noreen Goldman. "The Healthy Migrant Effect: New Findings From the Mexican Family Life Survey." American Journal of Public Health 98, no. 1 (January 2008): 78–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2006.098418.

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2

Oropesa, R. S., Nancy S. Landale, and Marianne M. Hillemeier. "Searching for the Family Legal Status of Mexican-Origin Children." Journal of Family Issues 38, no. 5 (July 9, 2016): 700–727. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0192513x16632264.

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Interest in the consequences of family legal status for children has grown in response to immigration-related changes in the ethnic composition of American society. However, few population-based empirical studies devote attention to family legal status because of data limitations. Using restricted data from the California Health Interview Survey (2009), the primary objectives of this research are to identify and evaluate strategies for measuring this important determinant of life chances among Mexican-origin children. The results indicate that measurement strategies matter. Estimates of the size of status-specific segments of this population and their risks of living in poverty are sensitive to how family legal status is operationalized. These findings provide the foundation for a discussion of how various “combinatorial” measurement strategies may rely on untenable assumptions that can be avoided with less reductionist approaches.
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Beltrán-Sánchez, Hiram, Eileen M. Crimmins, Graciela M. Teruel, and Duncan Thomas. "Links Between Childhood and Adult Social Circumstances and Obesity and Hypertension in the Mexican Population." Journal of Aging and Health 23, no. 7 (September 23, 2011): 1141–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0898264311422255.

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Objectives: This study examines links between early life circumstances and adult socioeconomic status and obesity and hypertension in the adult Mexican population. Method: We use data from the Mexican Family Life Survey (MxFLS) collected in 2002 for people aged 20 or older ( N = 14,280). Results: We found that men with low education and women with more education have significantly lower obesity. Women with higher education also have significantly less hypertension. Obesity triples the likelihood of hypertension among both men and women. Better childhood experiences are associated with less hypertension among women, but more hypertension among men in rural areas. Discussion: Recent changes in income, nutrition, and infection in Mexico may be responsible for the observed high prevalence of overweight and obesity and the extremely high odds of hypertension among obese young adults.
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Gunes, Pinar Mine, and Magda Tsaneva. "The effects of teenage childbearing on education, physical health, and mental distress: evidence from Mexico." Journal of Demographic Economics 86, no. 2 (May 7, 2020): 183–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/dem.2020.2.

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AbstractThis paper estimates the effects of teenage childbearing on education, working, physical and mental health, and physical activity of young girls in Mexico using two waves of the nationally representative Mexican Family Life Survey. We employ a propensity score matching model that accounts for a rich set of baseline covariates that predict teenage childbearing to attempt to reduce the bias due to confounding variables associated with teenage childbearing. The results demonstrate that teenage childbearing is associated with an increase in the probability of being overweight, and reductions in physical activity and the probability of high school completion. Moreover, the results are consistent when we employ sibling fixed effects to account for unobservable family background.
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Martinez-Cardoso, Aresha M., and Arline T. Geronimus. "The Weight of Migration: Reconsidering Health Selection and Return Migration among Mexicans." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 22 (November 19, 2021): 12136. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182212136.

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While migration plays a key role in shaping the health of Mexican migrants in the US and those in Mexico, contemporary Mexican migration trends may challenge the health selection and return migration hypotheses, two prevailing assumptions of how migration shapes health. Using data from the Mexican Family Life Survey (2002; 2005), we tested these two hypotheses by comparing the cardiometabolic health profiles of (1) Mexico–US future migrants and nonmigrants and (2) Mexico–US return migrants and nonmigrants. First, we found limited evidence for health selection: the cardiometabolic health of Mexico–US future migrants was not measurably better than the health of their compatriots who did not migrate, although migrants differed demographically from nonmigrants. However, return migrants had higher levels of adiposity compared to those who stayed in Mexico throughout their lives; time spent in the US was also associated with obesity and elevated waist circumference. Differences in physical activity and smoking behavior did not mediate these associations. Our findings suggest positive health selection might not drive the favorable health profiles among recent cohorts of Mexican immigrants in the US. However, the adverse health of return migrants with respect to that of nonmigrants underscores the importance of considering the lived experience of Mexican migrants in the US as an important determinant of their health.
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Wang, Qing. "Male Migration and Female Labor Market Attachment." International Migration Review 52, no. 1 (March 2018): 66–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imre.12290.

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This study examines the impact of male migration to the United States on female labor market outcomes in Mexico, using the longitudinal data set from the Mexican Family Life Survey. I differentiate between domestic and cross-border migration, as well as other types of absence, and account for their differential effects. The first-difference approach is employed to address the econometric issues of endogeneity and self-selection. Findings show that the effects of cross-border migration on the labor market outcomes of left-behind women appear to be limited in the short term. Domestic migration is not a major factor that influences the labor market outcomes of women.
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7

Levasseur, Pierre. "‘Fat black sheep’: Educational penalties of childhood obesity in an emerging country." Public Health Nutrition 23, no. 18 (September 4, 2020): 3394–408. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1368980020002906.

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AbstractObjective:This article explores the relationship between childhood obesity and educational outcomes in Mexico, a country where excess weight is predominant.Design:Using complementary multivariate estimators, we empirically investigate the association between childhood excess weight, measured in 2002, and schooling attainment measured 10 years later. Non-linear specifications are tested, and heterogeneous effects according to gender, living area and economic backgrounds are investigated.Setting:To fill the literature gap, this study focuses on the understudied context of emerging countries such as Mexico.Participants:Panel data from the Mexican Family Life Survey (2002–2012) are used. We restricted the sample to adolescent individuals who had between 9 and 15 years old in 2002 (attended primary or secondary school in 2002). The survey provides an accurate follow-up information on weight, height and waist circumference for each individual.Results:Controlling for a comprehensive set of covariates, we find that the relationship is non-linear in Mexico. While weight-based childhood obesity and abdominal adiposity are significantly associated with lower school attainment, at least in urban settings, no schooling gap is found between overweight students and their normal-weight counterparts. Along with rural–urban heterogeneity, obesity-based educational penalties appear to be stronger for girls and students from privileged economic backgrounds.Conclusions:These results emphasise the co-occurrence of anti-fat and pro-fat social norms in Mexican schools: while anti-fat norms may particularly concern female, richer and urban students, pro-fat norms might persist among male, poorer and rural students. These findings have important implications for public policy, namely about awareness anti-obesity programmes.
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Piperata, Barbara A., Mark Hubbe, and Kammi K. Schmeer. "Intra-population variation in anemia status and its relationship to economic status and self-perceived health in the Mexican Family Life Survey: Implications for bioarchaeology." American Journal of Physical Anthropology 155, no. 2 (May 27, 2014): 210–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.22543.

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9

Arvizu-Rivera, R. I., N. Escobedo-Zuñiga, I. J. Colunga-Pedraza, G. Serna-Peña, and A. Cárdenas. "AB1359-HPR PERCEPTION ABOUT FIBROMYALGIA AND ITS ACCOMPANYING SYMPTOMS AMONG MEXICAN PHYSICIANS." Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 79, Suppl 1 (June 2020): 1966.1–1967. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-eular.4845.

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Background:Previous studies showed that 93% of rheumatologists consider fibromyalgia (FM) as a clinical entity. However, accompanying symptoms such as fatigue, widespread pain, sleep disturbance and headache are underrecognized among physicians. According to a previous study, most recognized symptoms by general practitioners are fatigue and widespread pain (72.6%), while about thirty percent of physicians recognize sleep disturbance and depression as symptoms.Objectives:To investigate physicians’ point of view of FM accompanying symptoms in northeastern Mexico.Methods:We designed an electronic survey about physicians’ perceived importance of depression, fatigue, widespread pain, sleep disturbances, headache and irritable bowel disease symptoms (pain and cramping) in patients with FM. Questions were answered using a 5-point Likert scale: 1, strongly disagree; 2, disagree; 3, neutral; 4, agree; 5, strongly agree. General practitioners, rheumatologists, neurologists, psychiatrists were included.Results:A total of 236 physicians were included: general practitioners, 149 (59.3%); rheumatologists, 21 (8.9%); neurologists 18 (7.6%); psychiatrists 8 (3.4%), and family physicians, 49 (20.8%). FM was considered a clinical diagnosis by 208 (88.1%) and most physicians think FM is both a physical and psychological condition, 190 (80.5%). Full results on physicians’ perceptions is shown in Table 1. Fatigue was the symptom which most physicians agreed or strongly agreed was important in FM, 219 (92.7%). Disagreement (any degree) was greater regarding abdominal pain/cramping being an important symptom in FM, 52 (22%). Complete results can be seen in Image 1.Table 1.Perceptions’ of physicians about FM.VariableFM is a clinic diagnostic, n (%)208 (88.1)Unsure FM is a clinical diagnostic, n (%)12 (5)FM is a physical illness, n (%)33 (14)FM is a psychological illness, n (%)11 (4.7)FM is both physical and psychological, n (%)190 (80.5)FM has a negative impact on quality of life, n (%)227 (96.2)FM has a negative impact on life expectancy, n (%)135 (57.2)Conclusion:FM was considered a clinical diagnostic and an illness both physical and psychological by most physicians. Headache and abdominal pain/cramping are symptoms less likely to be perceived as important in patients with FM.References:[1]Perrot S, Choy E, Petersel D, et al. Survey of physician experiences and perceptions about the diagnosis and treatment of fibromyalgia. BMC Health Serv Res. 2012 Oct 10;12:356.[2]Kianmehr N, Haghighi A, Bidari A. Are general practitioners well informed about fibromyalgia? Int J Rheum Dis. 2017 Dec;20(12):1917-1921Figure 1.Image 1. Perception of accompanying symptoms of fibromyalgia (FM)Disclosure of Interests:None declared
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Peláez-Ballestas, Ingris, Claudia Infante-Castañeda, and Liliana Giraldo-Rodríguez. "Comparison between Covid-19 and influenza A(H1N1) pandemic experiences and risk perception in Mexican university." Salud Pública de México 63, no. 5 (July 29, 2021): 619–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.21149/12367.

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Objective. To compare the perceptions and experiences between the A(H1N1) and Covid-19 pandemics in a univer­sity population. Materials and methods. Online surveys were administered during the influenza A(H1N1) –originated in Mexico in 2009– and Covid-19 epidemics. Measures: so­ciodemographic characteristics, knowledge, information and communication, perception of risk, physical and mental health, effects on daily life, and preventive behaviors. Results. This study included 24 998 respondents, 51.36% from the A(H1N1) group and 48.63% from the Covid-19 group. Differences were observed in the perception of severity. During the influenza A(H1N1) pandemic worry was the feeling reported most frequently, while for Covid-19 it was anxiety. Covid-19 had greater impact on students’ family economy and caused a higher uncertainty. Conclusions. The perceptions and ex­periences of the two pandemics were similar but the impact has been much greater for Covid-19, especially in terms of the severity, family economy, preventive behaviors, and uncertainty
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MartÍNez, JosÉ Felipe, Lucrecia Santibanez, and Edson E. Serván Mori. "Educational Opportunity and Immigration in México: Exploring the Individual and Systemic Relationships." Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education 115, no. 10 (October 2013): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016146811311501002.

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Background/Context Much research has investigated the complex interplay between education and migration. Education has been alternatively conceptualized as playing an important role as motivator or deterrent of future migration. This relationship, however, is often investigated in terms of coarse indicators of educational attainment. Purpose In this paper we investigate a less commonly explored side of the link between education and immigration. Our study estimates the relationship between immigration and educational quality and opportunity for the case of Mexico and the United States. Using these indicators we are able to delve deeper into how education affects migration decisions. Studying the relationships between immigration rates and aggregate indicators of education quality and opportunity can shed light into the ways in which education systems and governmental structures may influence or react to immigration patterns among school-age children. Research Design Data for this study come from three different sources: The Mexican Family Life Survey (MXFLS), which contains information on individual migration decisions; the Oportunidades program, which contains extensive family socio-economic characteristics and school quality indicators; and data from the National Population Council of Mexico, which contains socio-economic and demographic information about communities. Taking advantage of this data, we use logistic and linear regression models to estimate the relationship between education quality and migration. Results Our results suggest significant relationships between individual decisions to migrate and indicators of educational access, quality, and opportunity, suggesting that the experiences and opportunities afforded to individuals and families in school throughout the years can be of consequence for explaining immigration decisions and patterns. Conclusions/Recommendations Our analyses raise questions for delineating a framework for studying the relationship between educational quality and immigration. Such a framework should consider that not only individuals may have a lower incentive to further their schooling, but communities and even authorities may also have a lower incentive to improve school quality and opportunity.
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Sengupta, Rabishankar, and Sudhansu Sekhar Dash. "A COMPREHENSIVE INVENTORY AND ECOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF ALIEN PLANT INVASION IN MIZORAM, INDIA." Indonesian Journal of Forestry Research 7, no. 2 (October 31, 2020): 135–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.20886/ijfr.2020.7.2.135-154.

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Invasion by alien plants has a detrimental effect on the natural forest plant community, leading to the loss of native species. An inventory of alien plants facilitates in determining the potential threats to the natural plant biodiversity. This present paper evaluates the alien plants in Mizoram (an Indo-Burma hotspot region) and provides the first authentic inventory of alien plants of Mizoram along with their diversity, ecological aspects, origin, and status of invasion. Extensive field surveys were done during July 2018 to September 2019 in different protected areas of Mizoram. We adopted Random Sampling Technique using nested quadrats in a plot size of 400 m2 (20 m × 20 m), within which a quadrate size of 5 m × 5 m was laid for shrubs and 1 m × 1 m was laid for herbs. Plant specimens were collected, dried, poisoned with 0.1% Mercuric Chloride (MgCl2); voucher specimens were prepared and deposited in Central National Herbarium, Botanical Survey of India (CAL) after proper identification.The results revealed the occurrence of 163 alien plant species under 135 genera belonging to 51 families in Mizoram. Maximum species were represented by family Asteraceae with 29 species followed by Leguminosae (19 species), Convolvulaceae (9 species), Euphorbiaceae (7 species) and Amaranthaceae (7 species). The 57.66% of the alien species reported from Mizoram were of American origin followed by 11.65 % from African, 7.36% from Mexican and 5.52% from Australian origin. Life form analysis revealed the presence of 58.64 % herbs, 15.43 % trees and 9.87% shrubs. Out of the whole alien plants recorded, 91 species used in traditional medicines, 43 species as ornamental, 15 species were edibles, nine species used as timber and four species used as green manure. The study also recommends the ten most obnoxious species, five neo-invasive plants, which have the greatest potential threats to the native flora. The process and probable causes of invasion in the state were also discussed briefly, which may be utilized in the preparation of conservation or forest management policies.
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Herrera, Martha Cecilia, and Erika Cecilia Montoya Zavala. "Child migrants returning to Culiacán, Sinaloa, Mexico." ÁNFORA 26, no. 46 (December 12, 2018): 71–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.30854/anf.v26.n46.2019.557.

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Objective: to characterize familiy profiles from those who return to Mexico after being in the United states and to learn about the difficulties faced by the returning migrant children, with specific attention to their adaptation within the Mexican school system as well as the actions undertaken by parents and teachers to help them in the process. Methodology: a random representative survey was carried out in elementary schools in Culiacán, Sinaloa between March 23rd and December 7th of 2015. Semi-structured interviews were also conducted with parents who returned and the teachers of children who had returned. These interviews were held between March 13th and July 29th of 2016. Results: it was shown that the majority of families are mixed and have a greater number of children who are citizens of the United States. The study also revealed that from a total of 534 children who had been returned to primary schools, 87.4% were born in the United States. Those students suffer from a problem of invisibility in the educational system and, at the same time, face bulling because of their different appearance. Additionally, children and their parents struggle with depression in the adaptation process. Conclusions: return migration to Mexico has been a constant. For children, their families, and the society to which they return, the challenge in return migration is evident. It also creates challenges in a child’s school life, especially due to the fact that they have little or no command of Spanish.
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De Snyder, V. Neily Salgado. "Family Life Across the Border: Mexican Wives Left Behind." Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 15, no. 3 (August 1993): 391–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07399863930153008.

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Toyokawa, Noriko. "I WILL KEEP CONTRIBUTING TO MY FAMILY: FAMILY OBLIGATION AMONG OLDER ADULTS WITH MEXICAN IMMIGRANT BACKGROUNDS." Innovation in Aging 3, Supplement_1 (November 2019): S375. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.1374.

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Abstract Providing care of older parents is a family obligation for children with Mexican cultural contexts (Knight et al., 2010). Nevertheless, little is known about how parents with Mexican cultural backgrounds believe about their family obligations. The current study conceptualized Mexican American older adults’ sense of family obligation. Data was collected from 307 Mexican Americans (Mage=54, SD=8, range 45-77 years old, females=56%) through an online survey. A 2-factor model: Expectation on children’s caregiving (3-item) and Efforts to reduce children’s burden (7-item) were identified as the best-fit model through EFA and CFA analyses (CFI=.96, SRMSA=.4). The component of efforts to reduce children’s burden predicted participants’ generativity assessed by the scale of McAdams and Aubin (1992). The findings suggest that Mexican American older adults expect their children to take care of them, as they feel obligated to reduce their children’s caregiving burden. The function of the cultural value in intergenerational relations is discussed.
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Schumm, Walter R., Eric E. Mccollum, Margaret A. Bugaighis, Anthony P. Jurich, Stephan R. Bollman, and Julia Reitz. "Differences Between Anglo and Mexican American Family Members on Satisfaction with Family Life." Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 10, no. 1 (March 1988): 39–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07399863880101003.

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Sánchez-Román, Sofia, Yanin Chavarri Guerra, Andrea Morales Morales Alfaro, Daniela Ramirez Maza, Andrea de la O Murillo, and Enrique Soto Perez De Celis. "Concerns and difficulties associated with the COVID-19 pandemic among older adults with cancer in Mexico." Journal of Clinical Oncology 39, no. 15_suppl (May 20, 2021): 12042. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2021.39.15_suppl.12042.

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12042 Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the well-being of people not only due to the disease but also because of stay-at-home orders, social distancing, unemployment, and different kinds of loses. Older adults have particularly suffered during the pandemic, with increased health-related concerns and anxiety leading to increased vulnerability. However, little is known about the effects of the pandemic on older adults with cancer living in developing countries. They are facing issues related to their diagnosis and treatment, as well as the effects of the pandemic on their care and on the well-being of their families. To improve care for this vulnerable population, we studied the concerns and difficulties associated with COVID-19 among older Mexican adults with cancer. Methods: We included patients age ≥65 with the 10 most common tumors in Mexico according to GLOBOCAN and within 3-24 months of cancer diagnosis at two public hospitals in Mexico City. Patients were contacted telephonically and asked to complete a survey reporting the difficulties encountered during the COVID-19 pandemic and to rate their concerns associated with cancer care management using a 0-10 Likert-type scale, with higher ratings meaning increased concerns. Focused interviews were used to describe the individual experience of selected patients and their relatives related to COVID-19 and cancer care. Results: Between April 20, 2020 and December 1, 2021, 67 patients (mean age 71.9, min 65, max 90; 35.8% female; 62.7% living with a partner) were included. The most common tumors were prostate (43%), colon (16%), and lung (12%). 46% had Stage IV disease, and 61% had a life expectancy of more than a year. Twenty-five percent of patients reported encountering at least one difficulty in obtaining cancer care due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 43% of the patients reported difficulties with accessing follow-up cancer care; 39% reported issues with obtaining medications, including chemotherapy; and 34% reported problems obtaining medical care in general, including oncology visits. Regarding concerns, 33% of the patients reported being “very worried” or “extremely worried” about the COVID-19 pandemic. The most relevant concerns were related to getting infected with COVID-19 (or having a family member who became infected) (mean rating 7.9, SD 2.9); not being able to pay for cancer treatments or medical care (mean rating 6.9, SD 3.5); and worsening of cancer due to delayed care during the pandemic (mean rating 6.6, SD 3.7). Conclusions: A significant proportion of older adults with cancer in Mexico faced difficulties obtaining cancer treatment and follow-up care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Their most relevant concerns included getting infected, financial losses, and progression of disease. Creating systems to provide continued cancer care for vulnerable populations in developing countries is essential to face the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Angel, Jaqueline L. "LATE-LIFE CAREGIVING IN MEXICAN AMERICAN FAMILIES." Innovation in Aging 3, Supplement_1 (November 2019): S187. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.670.

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Abstract This study explores how sociological triangulation can be used to examine Mexican-American families in late-life caregiving. We examine the importance of household structure in providing dementia care. The movement away from traditional residential arrangements that result from neoliberal market reforms and international migration means that intergenerational relationship norms and exchanges will inevitably change and affect Mexican-American families caring for their elders. For many aging Mexican-Americans, a severe lack of resources and health limitations introduce major uncertainties about their futures. We employ the H-EPESE and Sacramento Area Longitudinal Study of Aging to document the nature, extent, and quality of dementia caregiving in the Southwestern United States. Qualitative results uncover how the changing meaning of social relationships impacts family life for older parents with dementia. Multivariate analyses reveal that the late-life migration (after 50yrs) undermines resources and opportunities for community-based care. Implications of the findings for informal and formal support are discussed.
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Bhopti, Anoo, Ted Brown, and Primrose Lentin. "Family Quality of Life." Journal of Early Intervention 38, no. 4 (October 21, 2016): 191–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1053815116673182.

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A scoping review was conducted to identify factors influencing the quality of life of families of children with disability. The review also explored the scales used to measure family quality of life (FQOL) as an outcome in early childhood intervention services (ECIS). Multiple databases were searched from 2000 to 2013 to include studies pertinent to ECIS. Results were charted and summarized based on scoping methodology. Eighteen articles were chosen for the review based on the selection criteria. Results were summarized as five factors that affect FQOL, namely, (a) disability-related support, (b) family interactions/family relationships, (c) overall well-being, (d) support from services, and (e) severity and type of disability. The review also identified two FQOL scales that were used most frequently within ECIS: (a) the Beach Center Family Quality of Life Survey, and (b) Family Quality of Life Survey: Main Caregivers of People With Intellectual or Developmental Disabilities. It is recommended that those responsible for evaluation decisions within ECIS programs should consider using a FQOL scale to measure family outcomes. Furthermore, professionals working with families within ECIS should consider the factors affecting FQOL to further enhance their service provision.
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Lindstrom, David P. "Mexican Migrant Integration in the United States, 1965–2015." ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 684, no. 1 (July 2019): 85–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002716219856878.

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This article uses 20 years of survey data from the Mexican Migration Project to describe how the experiences of Mexico-U.S. migrants have changed over time. I use survey questions about migrants’ experiences on their last U.S. trip to develop composite indices of six integration domains, and then estimate random intercept linear regression models with individual-, family-, and community-level characteristics to explain variations in Mexican migrant integration. I find that, over time, Mexican migrant linguistic and social integration has steadily increased, whereas integration in other family and economic domains changed little or not at all. Results from the multivariate models show the importance of human capital to integration across the multiple domains. Higher education, more time spent in the country of destination, and being male are all strongly associated with higher levels of integration. I also find evidence that both family and community migration networks facilitate integration.
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Arce, Carlos H., Edward Murguia, and W. Parker Frisbie. "Phenotype and Life Chances Among Chicanos." Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 9, no. 1 (March 1987): 19–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073998638703090102.

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Data from a national Chicano survey with nearly 1000 respondents were examined to test the hypothesis that because of internal (intragroup) and external (intergroup) discrimination, both past and present, Mexican Americans with a European physical appearance will have more enhanced life chances as measured by higher socioeconomic status than Mexican Americans with an indigenous Native American physical appearance. Two variables, skin color and physical features, were combined into a composite variable of observed phenotype. When observed phenotype was correlated with indicators of socioeconomic status, the hypothesis was largely confirmed.
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Bustamante, Juan José. "The U.S. Mexican immigrant family in a changing society: a critical overview." Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Sociologica, no. 76 (March 30, 2021): 79–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/0208-600x.76.05.

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This article charts literature debates about the structural changes of the Mexican immigrant family in the United States. It presents, first, a critical overview of the conventional literature on the Mexican immigrant family, typically framed around assimilation models, their major themes, and shortcomings. Then, shifting frameworks, this paper shows how structural inequality and feminist models, as critical approaches to emerging immigrant family forms, help us to understand the transformational parallels between U.S. society and the Mexican immigrant family structure. It is argued in this article that the Mexican family is structurally diverse. In doing so, the discussion is placed in the larger context of the U.S., explaining how historical and present social forces associated with unequal access to economic, labor, and educational opportunities have perpetuated the marginality of the Mexican immigrant family vis-à-vis the mainstream family. The paper also outlines and discusses the ways feminist, intersectional, and postmodernism frameworks shape the current literature debates on immigrant families. Lastly, it discusses how diversity in terms of family structure and family life contributes to the general field of family study in the U.S. and globally.
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Barozzi, Ronald L., and John W. Engel. "A Survey of Attitudes about Family Life Education." Social Casework 66, no. 2 (February 1985): 106–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/104438948506600207.

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Jacobs, Francine, Priscilla M. D. Little, and Cheryl Almeida. "Supporting Family Life: A Survey of Homeless Shelters." Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless 2, no. 4 (January 1993): 269–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01065523.

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Blank, Susan, and Ramon S. Torrecilha. "Understanding the Living Arrangements of Latino Immigrants: A Life Course Approach." International Migration Review 32, no. 1 (March 1998): 3–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/019791839803200101.

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Using data from the 1990 Panel Study of Income Dynamics Latino Sample, this study examines three competing hypotheses for understanding extended family living among Mexican, Puerto Rican and Cuban immigrants. The findings indicate no significant relationship between living with extended kin and cultural indicators — such as English fluency – or economic factors – such as employment and income. Rather, the data support a life course explanation. Extended family living arrangements among Latino immigrants represent a resource generating strategy for caring for young children and older adults. Differences in age, relative location in the life course, and migration opportunities inform group variation in extended living arrangements for Mexican, Puerto Rican and Cuban immigrants. These findings verify patterns of household composition among Latino immigrants suggested by nonrandom, ethnographic samples.
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Cansler, Emily, Kimberly A. Updegraff, and Sandra D. Simpkins. "Mexican American Seventh Graders’ Future Work and Family Plans." Journal of Early Adolescence 32, no. 3 (March 23, 2011): 313–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0272431610397660.

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Marsiglia, Flavio F., Elizabeth Kiehne, and Stephanie L. Ayers. "Reexamining the Acculturation Gap: The Relationship Between the Bidimensional Parent-Adolescent Gap and Risky Behavior Among Mexican-Heritage Adolescents." Journal of Early Adolescence 38, no. 5 (November 17, 2016): 581–605. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0272431616678991.

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Elevated rates of risky behavior among Latino youth have been linked to features of acculturation such as discrepant rates of acculturation between parents and adolescents. This study examined how parent-adolescent mainstream and Mexican cultural gaps are differentially related to adolescent risky behavior through family conflict, parental monitoring, and parental involvement among Mexican immigrant families. Contrary to the acculturation gap–distress hypothesis, family conflict did not mediate the relationship between acculturation gaps and adolescent risky behavior. Whereas the mainstream cultural gap was associated with less risky adolescent behavior through increased parental monitoring and involvement, the opposite relationship emerged for the Mexican cultural gap. Findings are discussed in relation to the acculturation gap–distress model and the broader parent-child relationship context. Findings illuminate the practical, theoretical, and empirical importance of recognizing Mexican-heritage youth as embedded within an influential family milieu situated in a culturally plural context.
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Santiago, Catherine DeCarlo, Anna M. Ros, Laura M. L. Distel, Jaclyn Lennon Papadakis, Stephanie A. Torres, Stephanie K. Brewer, Anne K. Fuller, and Yvita Bustos. "Family Coping among Mexican-Origin Immigrants: Links to Child Mental Health." Journal of Child and Family Studies 29, no. 1 (October 1, 2019): 182–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10826-019-01602-6.

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Montes de Oca, Verónica, Telésforo Ramírez García, Rogelio Sáenz, and Jennifer Guillén. "The Linkage of Life Course, Migration, Health, and Aging." Journal of Aging and Health 23, no. 7 (August 30, 2011): 1116–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0898264311422099.

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Migration is a phenomenon that impacts individuals throughout the life course. Particularly, Mexican elderly migrants show evidence of lifetime accumulations of the effects of migration on health conditions. Objectives: Examine how the relationship between historical time and individual time explains different factors impacting the health of Mexican adult and elderly migrants in Mexico and the United States. Method: Data from in-depth interviews with Mexican migrants living in selected locations in Mexico and the United States were used to illustrate the links between life course conditions, aging, migration, and health outcomes. Results and Discussion: According to this theoretical perspective and the data, historical time, age at migration, and the conditions under which the migration trajectory developed, show different impacts on the health and quality of life of the elderly, as revealed through analysis of labor experience, disease and accidents, medical service, health treatment, transnational networks, and family formation.
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Ruiz, Bienvenido, Ramon S. Guerra, Arlett S. Lomeli, Rolando R. Longoria, and Billy James Ulibarrí. "The Catholic Church and Mexican American Social Mobility in the Postwar Midwest: Evidence from Life and Family Histories." Social Currents 5, no. 1 (April 25, 2017): 32–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2329496517704870.

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Religious affiliation has long been recognized as a relevant factor among the variables that intervene in the integration of immigrants to American society. While previous generations of many predominantly Roman Catholic ethnic groups are thought to have been helped along their way to assimilation by strong institutional support from American Catholic church institutions, Latinos, and in particular Mexican Americans, are considered an exception. This study examines the role that inclusion in Catholic institutions played in the social mobility experienced by multigenerational families of Mexican immigrant origin in the Midwest during the decades between 1945 and 1975. The analysis of life and family histories collected from in-depth interviews with older second- and third-generation Mexican Americans illustrates how integration into urban Catholic institutions and communities was instrumental in the upward social mobility observed in many of their family trajectories during the postwar decades. In particular, access to parochial schools and other institutions in the Catholic educational system once provided the children and grandchildren of Mexican immigrants the forms of human and social capital that allowed many in that generation to attain social mobility.
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Aloozer, Francesca. "Secondary Analysis of Perceptions and Meanings of Type 2 Diabetes Among Mexican American Women." Diabetes Educator 26, no. 5 (September 2000): 785–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/014572170002600507.

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PURPOSE the purpose of this study was to explore explanatory models of diabetes from the perspective of Mexican American women with type 2 diabetes. METHODS In-depth interviews were conducted in a secondary analysis of an interpretive interactionism study to investigate the meanings of diabetes from the perspectives of Mexican American women with type 2 diabetes. The sensitizing concept used was Kleinman's explanatory models of illness. The original study sample included 20 Mexican American women between the ages of 27 and 45 with varying lengths of time since diagnosis. RESULTS Data analysis was an interactive process. The data were collapsed into explanatory models of diabetes categorized as defining, getting, having, describing, or taking care of diabetes. The meaning of having diabetes was viewed as a life threat with complications and a shortened life. CONCLUSIONS Diabetes complications, viewed as symptoms, were structured in the explanatory models developed from the contextual arenas of family and community. Given the family and community history of diabetes, genetic predisposition to the disease, and perceived life threat, understanding Mexican American women's explanatory models about diabetes serves as a basis for negotiating therapeutic interventions.
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Perry, Adrienne, and Barry Isaacs. "Validity of the Family Quality of Life Survey-2006." Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities 28, no. 6 (April 27, 2015): 584–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jar.12141.

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Lee, Yoon G., Margaret A. Fitzgerald, Kenneth R. Bartkus, and Myung-Soo Lee. "Adjustment strategies and business success in minority-owned family firms." New England Journal of Entrepreneurship 18, no. 1 (March 1, 2015): 9–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/neje-18-01-2015-b001.

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With data from the 2003 and 2005 National Minority Business Owners Survey, we examined the extent to which minority business owners differ from nonminority business owners in their reported use of adjustment strategies, and the relationship between the use of adjustment strategies and perceived business success. The sample consisted of 193 African American, 200 Mexican American, 200 Korean American, and 210 white business owners. Mexican American and Korean American business owners reported higher levels of adjustment strategy use than African American and white business owners. The ordinary least squares show that reallocating family resources to meet business needs and reallocating business resources to meet family needs were negatively associated with perceived business success, whereas hiring paid help was positively associated with perceived business success.
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Santiago, Catherine DeCarlo, Sarah A. Jolie, Yvita Bustos, and Laura M. L. Distel. "Mexican-origin families coping together: Does family coping predict child coping?" Developmental Psychology 57, no. 8 (August 2021): 1291–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0001216.

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Parrado, Emilio A., and Chenoa A. Flippen. "Migration and Gender among Mexican Women." American Sociological Review 70, no. 4 (August 2005): 606–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000312240507000404.

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Despite their importance to women's empowerment and migrant adaptation more generally, the social and cultural processes that determine how gender relations and expectations evolve during the process of migration remain poorly understood. In this article, data from a survey conducted in Durham, North Carolina and four sending communities in Mexico are used to examine how the structures of labor, power, and emotional attachments within the family vary by migration and U.S. residency, women's human capital endowments, household characteristics, and social support. Using both quantitative and qualitative information, the main finding of the study is that the association between migration and gender relations is not uniform across different gender dimensions. The reconstruction of gender relations within the family at the place of destination is a dynamic process in which some elements brought from communities of origin are discarded, others are modified, and still others are reinforced. Results challenge the expectation that migrant women easily incorporate the behavior patterns and cultural values of the United States and illustrate the importance of selective assimilation for understanding the diversity of changes in gender relations that accompany migration.
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Dombrovskis, Aivis. "Use of the “Satisfaction With Family Life Scale” for Family Environment in Latvia." SOCIETY, INTEGRATION, EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference 2 (May 9, 2015): 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.17770/sie2012vol2.85.

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This study was conducted to ensure that the family environment research method “Satisfaction with the family live scale” (SWFL) (Agate, Zabriskie, et.al., 2009) can be adapted to Latvia’s circumstances. The research cohort (n=485) was made up of 161 men and 321 women aged 18-21. There were four hypotheses in the study: 1) SWFL should not be correlated with gender and age in the 18-22 age group; 2) SWFL should indicate positive correlation with cohesion in family and 3) negative correlation with conflicts in family 4) Items of instrument must establish one factor. The study analyses the adaptation of the survey and reflects the major results in terms of utilising the survey for scholarly research and practical work in relation to an examination of the family environment in Latvia. Internal compatibility was measured on the basis of the Cronbach alpha (ɑ = 0.86). The results of the research confirm the stated hypotheses and make it possible to conclude that adaptation of the survey was successful. The survey can, therefore, be used under Latvia’s circumstances, as well
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Jáuregui, Alejandra, Catalina Medina, Deborah Salvo, Simon Barquera, and Juan A. Rivera-Dommarco. "Active Commuting to School in Mexican Adolescents: Evidence From the Mexican National Nutrition and Health Survey." Journal of Physical Activity and Health 12, no. 8 (August 2015): 1088–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jpah.2014-0103.

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Background:Travel to school offers a convenient way to increase physical activity (PA) levels in youth. We examined the prevalence and correlates of active commuting to school (ACS) in a nationally representative sample of Mexican adolescents. A secondary objective was to explore the association between ACS and BMI status.Methods:Using data of adolescents (10–14 years old) from the 2012 Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey (n = 2952) we ran multivariate regression models to explore the correlates of ACS and to test the association between ACS and BMI z-score or overweight/obesity. Models were adjusted for potential confounders and design effect.Results:70.8% of adolescents engaged in ACS (walking: 68.8%, bicycling: 2.0%). ACS was negatively associated with travel time, age, mother’s education level, household motor vehicle ownership, family socioeconomic status, and living in urban areas or the North region of the country (P < .05). Time in ACS was negatively associated with overweight/obesity: Each additional minute of ACS was associated with a 1% decrease in the odds for being overweight or obese (P < .05).Conclusions:Potential correlates of ACS that may result in benefits for Mexican adolescents are identified. More studies on this relationship are needed to develop interventions aimed at increasing PA through ACS in Mexico.
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Turner, Richard Neil, and Brian Thiede. "Mexican-American Educational Stagnation." International Migration Review 52, no. 1 (March 2018): 159–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imre.12286.

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High school dropout rates among Mexican Americans decline markedly between the first and second immigrant generations and, consequently, move closer to non-Hispanic white levels. However, the third generation makes little progress in closing the remaining gap with whites despite their parents having more schooling on average than those of the second generation. Utilizing 2007–2013 Current Population Survey data, we examine whether an inter-generational shift away from two-parent families contributes to this educational stagnation. We also consider the effect of changes in sibship size. The analysis involves performing a partial regression decomposition of differences between second- and third-generation Mexican-American adolescents (aged 16–17 years) in the likelihood of having dropped out. We find that Mexican third-generation teens are close to nine percentage points less likely than second-generation peers to live with two parents. The decomposition results suggest that this change in family structure offsets a substantial portion of the negative influence of rising parental education on third-generation dropout risk.
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Bojanic, David C. "The impact of age and family life experiences on Mexican visitor shopping expenditures." Tourism Management 32, no. 2 (April 2011): 406–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tourman.2010.03.012.

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HAYNES, GEORGE W., JOSEPH I. ONOCHIE, and YOON LEE. "INFLUENCE OF FAMILY'S SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS ON THE DEBT STRUCTURE OF MEXICAN-AMERICAN AND KOREAN-AMERICAN SMALL BUSINESSES." Journal of Developmental Entrepreneurship 13, no. 03 (September 2008): 343–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1084946708001022.

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This study utilizes the Korean-American and Mexican-American samples in the National Minority Business Survey to examine the debt structure of small businesses owned by individuals from these ethnic groups. Small business owners with higher household net worth were more likely to borrow from finance companies, friends, and credit card companies. When controlling for business, business owner and family characteristics, Mexican-American small business owners with high net worth were significantly more likely to borrow from commercial banks than Mexican-American small business owners with low net worth are. Korean-American small business owners with high net worth were significantly more likely to utilize family loans than Korean-American small business owners with low net worth are. Korean-American small businesses appeared to be more financially dependent on the financial strength of their community, while Mexican-American small businesses owners appeared to be more financially independent.
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Witoelar, Firman. "Risk Sharing within the Extended Family: Evidence from the Indonesia Family Life Survey." Economic Development and Cultural Change 62, no. 1 (October 2013): 65–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/671715.

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42

Bin Jamal, Ali Fatah, and Mohammad Zakari. "Articulations of Family Life and Organization for Happy Life." International Journal of Social Science Research and Review 3, no. 4 (December 9, 2020): 22–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.47814/ijssrr.v3i4.55.

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Family is an instrumental for the development of the nation and culture. Different culture have different perception regarding the importance of the family. There are also difference in types of family, and social scientists measure the characteristics of the family in different cultures. In this paper we tried to explore the importance of family for happy life. In order to test the hypothesis, the chosen research question, data from the German General Social Survey 2014 is used. Based on statistical analysis and their results, both hypothesis are supported. These hypotheses and their results indicates that the people who spend their leisure time with family, they consider and think that family is important. On the other hand, people who are more interested in soaps and sitcoms, they may think that, all problems and issues are part of life but family is still important for them.
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Cruz, Rick A., Kevin M. King, Molly Mechammil, Mayra Bámaca-Colbert, and Richard W. Robins. "Mexican-origin youth substance use trajectories: Associations with cultural and family factors." Developmental Psychology 54, no. 1 (January 2018): 111–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0000387.

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Martin, Monica J., Rand D. Conger, and Richard W. Robins. "Family stress processes and drug and alcohol use by Mexican American adolescents." Developmental Psychology 55, no. 1 (January 2019): 170–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0000629.

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Safa, M. Dalal, Rebecca M. B. White, and George P. Knight. "Family contextual influences on bicultural competence development among U.S. Mexican-origin youths." Developmental Psychology 56, no. 8 (August 2020): 1596–609. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0001022.

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46

Mendes de Leon, Carlos F., Karl Eschbach, and Kyriakos S. Markides. "Population Trends and Late-Life Disability in Hispanics From the Midwest." Journal of Aging and Health 23, no. 7 (August 29, 2011): 1166–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0898264311422100.

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Objectives: To describe the growth of the Hispanic population in the Midwest states of the United States, to present disability levels in older Mexican and non-Mexican-origin Midwest Hispanics by place of birth and poverty status, and compare disability levels among older Midwest Hispanics with those among Southwest Hispanics as well as non-Hispanics Whites and African Americans in each region. Method: Population data come from decennial U.S. Census Bureau surveys. Disability data for adults ≥ 50 years old come from the 2008 American Community Survey. Results: The Hispanic population in the Midwest has tripled since 1980 and now constitutes 6.6% of the entire Midwest population. Older Midwest Hispanics are somewhat younger, have a higher male–female ratio, and are more likely to be born outside the continental United States than Southwest Hispanics. In the Midwest, foreign-born Mexican American men report the lowest disability levels. Foreign-born Hispanic women of non-Mexican origin report the highest disability levels. Overall, older Hispanics have intermediate disability levels relative to non-Hispanic Whites and African Americans. Midwest Hispanics report less disability than Southwest Hispanics. Discussion: There is substantial heterogeneity in late-life disability among Midwest Hispanics, which may be related to place of birth and of origin. Future research is needed to examine age at immigration and health selection as potential reasons for low disability levels among foreign-born Mexican American men.
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Echeverria, Iván, Marc Peraire, Gonzalo Haro, Rafael Mora, Isabel Camacho, Isabel Almodóvar, Vicente Mañes, Ignacio Zaera, and Ana Benito. "“Healthcare Kamikazes” during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Purpose in Life and Moral Courage as Mediators of Psychopathology." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 14 (July 6, 2021): 7235. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18147235.

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Although the required personal protective equipment was not available during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, Spanish healthcare workers continued to work, being dubbed as ‘healthcare kamikazes’. Two possible reasons are moral courage and purpose in life that, in turn, would modulate the appearance of psychopathology. Cross-sectional study was carried out in 90 Spanish and 59 Mexican healthcare professionals, and 56 medical and nursing students. Spanish professionals had suffered more work and overall exposure (M = 8.30; SD = 2.57 and M = 9.03; SD = 2.66) than Mexican (M = 5.10; SD = 1.87 and M = 5.55; SD = 2.35). Mexican professionals had fewer anxiety disorders (30.5%; n = 18) and a lower depression score (M = 4.45; SD = 5.63) than the Spanish (43.7%; n = 38; and M = 8.69; SD = 8.07). Spanish professionals more often experienced acute stress disorder (32.6%; n = 29). Purpose in life, in addition to having a direct protective effect on psychopathology, also modulated the relationship between personal and family exposure and psychopathology. In conclusion, purpose in life protects against the appearance of psychopathology in healthcare workers with personal and family exposure to SARS-CoV-2.
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Cooper, Daniel K., Kara S. Erolin, Elizabeth Wieling, Jared Durtschi, Elizabeth Aguilar, Maria Oriana Diaspro-Higuera, and Diego Garcia-Huidobro. "Family Violence, PTSD, and Parent–Child Interactions: Dyadic Data Analysis with Mexican Families." Child & Youth Care Forum 49, no. 6 (July 22, 2020): 915–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10566-020-09564-3.

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Samuel, Preethy S., Fredrick D. Pociask, Rosanne DiZazzo-Miller, Ann Carrellas, and Barbara W. LeRoy. "Concurrent Validity of the International Family Quality of Life Survey." Occupational Therapy In Health Care 30, no. 2 (December 22, 2015): 187–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/07380577.2015.1116129.

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Moghadamnejhad, Maryam Najafi, Sofia Heidari Kamroudi, and Shahnaz Kanaani Kutmjany. "Survey Family Position and Mental Health on Adolescent Life Skills." Academic Journal of Research in Economics and Management 2, no. 7 (July 2014): 35–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.12816/0006577.

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