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Working
Paper Series:
07.10
Wellbeing of Citizen Children of Immigrants in Relation to
Food Stamps and WIC, 1998-2005
Mariana Chilton
Abstract:
One in five children under the age of six in the United States is a child of immigrant
parents, making children of immigrants the fastest growing child population in the Unites States. A new version of this paper is forthcoming.
Though 93 % of children of immigrants are US citizens, federal assistance programs meant to
provide a safety net for poor families often do not reach these vulnerable children (1). There is
limited information on how this difficulty in participating in food assistance programs affects the
health and wellbeing of US citizen infants and toddlers of immigrant parents. The public health
impact of immigrant food assistance participation (or lack thereof) may be substantial, as
immigrants constitute 11% of the total U.S. population (2). Though there are many immigrants
in the United States, national surveys often under-include this hard to reach population, while
other localized studies have small samples which may not be representative of select immigrant
groups.
The Children’s Sentinel Nutrition Assessment Program (C-SNAP) is an ongoing multisite
survey which in various years included six states and Washington DC, that investigates the
associations between wellbeing and public assistance participation among young children under
the age of three. Since its inception in 1998, the C-SNAP study has been interviewing caregivers
of infants and toddlers in emergency departments and ambulatory care practices in Boston, MA,
Little Rock, AR, Baltimore, MD, Los Angeles, CA, Minneapolis, MN, Washington DC, and
Philadelphia, PA. Out of a sample (N=19,275) collected between 1998 and 2005, 7,216 (37%)
were children of immigrants.
This study investigated the associations between federal food assistance participation and
maternal and child wellbeing among immigrant households. Wellbeing was measured by
indicators of household and child food insecurity, child health, history of child hospitalizations
since birth, maternal depression and child development. Such an analysis is not straight forward
given the heterogeneity of immigrants in the United States. Since the sample included
immigrants from many countries, separate analyses were carried out, after a primary analysis of
all US Born caregivers and all immigrants who had no private insurance. Differences among
immigrants of the Americas were also investigated. Although limited by small cell size for immigrants from non-Hispanic countries, we include descriptive data for each category because
of the dearth of health and food insecurity data for several of these groups.
Immigrants from Latin America represent approximately 46% of the total immigrant
population in the United States (2), and since we found the least amount of heterogeneity in the
sample among the Latinos, multivariate analyses of the sample was limited to two sample sets:
US Born vs. all immigrants, and then, US born Latinos and immigrant Latino caretakers, who
differ in immigration status but share linguistic and cultural heritage. A new version of this paper is forthcoming.
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