Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources

The claim of some policymakers that education is the great equalizer of socioeconomic disparities in health (Low et al. 2005) has come under question in recent years. Higher education is related to better health for both immigrants and the Canadian-born. However, immigrants experience weaker health...

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Main Author: Hawkins, Naoko
Other Authors: Schieman, Scott
Language:en_ca
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/44113
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-441132014-04-01T03:44:41ZNativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial ResourcesHawkins, NaokoSocial stressImmigrant integrationImmigrant health0626The claim of some policymakers that education is the great equalizer of socioeconomic disparities in health (Low et al. 2005) has come under question in recent years. Higher education is related to better health for both immigrants and the Canadian-born. However, immigrants experience weaker health returns to their education than the native-born (Kennedy et al. 2006). Despite the importance of this issue, the reasons for this gap are not fully understood. This dissertation integrates the immigrant health, social stress, and immigrant integration literatures to better understand this issue, using Cycles 17 and 22 of the Statistics Canada collected General Social Survey (GSS). The analyses reveal that education has a diminished effect on the self-rated health (although not stress) of immigrants, the functional limitations of established immigrants, and the happiness of recent immigrants. The reasons for this gap vary depending on the health measure. The weaker relationship between education and the functional ability of established immigrants and the happiness of recent immigrants is explained by immigrants’ lower work-related returns (employment type, occupational skill, personal income) to education. For self-rated health, the nativity status differential in the effect of education on self-rated health is rooted in immigrants’ lower work-related and psychosocial returns (mastery and trust, although not social support) to education. Since work-related and psychosocial resources are integrally linked to health, immigrants experience lower health returns to their education than the native-born. These findings make three major contributions. First, they extend the traditional understanding of the relationship between education and health (Low et al. 2005), underscoring that immigrants do not experience the same level of health benefits to their education as the native-born. Second, they augment knowledge about why immigrants experience weaker health returns to their education than the native-born: because they receive diminished employment types, occupational levels, income, mastery, and trust relative to their levels of education. Third, the results highlight that foreign education is not linked to as high mastery and trust as that of the native-born – a new finding that underscores that foreign education is not just linked to diminished work-related resources and health, but psychosocial resources as well.Schieman, Scott2014-032014-03-27T19:13:13ZNO_RESTRICTION2014-03-27T19:13:13Z2014-03-27Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/44113en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Social stress
Immigrant integration
Immigrant health
0626
spellingShingle Social stress
Immigrant integration
Immigrant health
0626
Hawkins, Naoko
Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources
description The claim of some policymakers that education is the great equalizer of socioeconomic disparities in health (Low et al. 2005) has come under question in recent years. Higher education is related to better health for both immigrants and the Canadian-born. However, immigrants experience weaker health returns to their education than the native-born (Kennedy et al. 2006). Despite the importance of this issue, the reasons for this gap are not fully understood. This dissertation integrates the immigrant health, social stress, and immigrant integration literatures to better understand this issue, using Cycles 17 and 22 of the Statistics Canada collected General Social Survey (GSS). The analyses reveal that education has a diminished effect on the self-rated health (although not stress) of immigrants, the functional limitations of established immigrants, and the happiness of recent immigrants. The reasons for this gap vary depending on the health measure. The weaker relationship between education and the functional ability of established immigrants and the happiness of recent immigrants is explained by immigrants’ lower work-related returns (employment type, occupational skill, personal income) to education. For self-rated health, the nativity status differential in the effect of education on self-rated health is rooted in immigrants’ lower work-related and psychosocial returns (mastery and trust, although not social support) to education. Since work-related and psychosocial resources are integrally linked to health, immigrants experience lower health returns to their education than the native-born. These findings make three major contributions. First, they extend the traditional understanding of the relationship between education and health (Low et al. 2005), underscoring that immigrants do not experience the same level of health benefits to their education as the native-born. Second, they augment knowledge about why immigrants experience weaker health returns to their education than the native-born: because they receive diminished employment types, occupational levels, income, mastery, and trust relative to their levels of education. Third, the results highlight that foreign education is not linked to as high mastery and trust as that of the native-born – a new finding that underscores that foreign education is not just linked to diminished work-related resources and health, but psychosocial resources as well.
author2 Schieman, Scott
author_facet Schieman, Scott
Hawkins, Naoko
author Hawkins, Naoko
author_sort Hawkins, Naoko
title Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources
title_short Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources
title_full Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources
title_fullStr Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources
title_full_unstemmed Nativity Status and the Relationship between Education and Health: The Role of Work-related and Psychosocial Resources
title_sort nativity status and the relationship between education and health: the role of work-related and psychosocial resources
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/44113
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