Cargando…

Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study

The overall consensus is that foreign-born adults who come to America age < 20 y achieve economic success but develop adverse behaviors (smoking and drinking) that lead to worse cardiometabolic health than immigrants who arrive age ≥ 20 y. Whether age of immigration affects the health of African-...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shoup, Elyssa M., Hormenu, Thomas, Osei-Tutu, Nana H., Ishimwe, M. C. Sage, Patterson, Arielle C., DuBose, Christopher W., Wentzel, Annemarie, Horlyck-Romanovsky, Margrethe F., Sumner, Anne E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7765413/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33333954
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17249405
_version_ 1783628484972642304
author Shoup, Elyssa M.
Hormenu, Thomas
Osei-Tutu, Nana H.
Ishimwe, M. C. Sage
Patterson, Arielle C.
DuBose, Christopher W.
Wentzel, Annemarie
Horlyck-Romanovsky, Margrethe F.
Sumner, Anne E.
author_facet Shoup, Elyssa M.
Hormenu, Thomas
Osei-Tutu, Nana H.
Ishimwe, M. C. Sage
Patterson, Arielle C.
DuBose, Christopher W.
Wentzel, Annemarie
Horlyck-Romanovsky, Margrethe F.
Sumner, Anne E.
author_sort Shoup, Elyssa M.
collection PubMed
description The overall consensus is that foreign-born adults who come to America age < 20 y achieve economic success but develop adverse behaviors (smoking and drinking) that lead to worse cardiometabolic health than immigrants who arrive age ≥ 20 y. Whether age of immigration affects the health of African-born Blacks living in America is unknown. Our goals were to examine cultural identity, behavior, and socioeconomic factors and determine if differences exist in the cardiometabolic health of Africans who immigrated to America before and after age 20 y. Of the 482 enrollees (age: 38 ± 1 (mean ± SE), range: 20–65 y) in the Africans in America cohort, 23% (111/482) arrived age < 20 y, and 77% (371/482) arrived age ≥ 20 y. Independent of francophone status or African region of origin, Africans who immigrated age < 20 y had similar or better cardiometabolic health than Africans who immigrated age ≥ 20 y. The majority of Africans who immigrated age < 20 y identified as African, had African-born spouses, exercised, did not adopt adverse health behaviors, and actualized early life migration advantages, such as an American university education. Due to maintenance of cultural identity and actualization of opportunities in America, cardiometabolic health may be protected in Africans who immigrate before age 20. In short, immigrant health research must be cognizant of the diversity within the foreign-born community and age of immigration.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7765413
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77654132020-12-27 Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study Shoup, Elyssa M. Hormenu, Thomas Osei-Tutu, Nana H. Ishimwe, M. C. Sage Patterson, Arielle C. DuBose, Christopher W. Wentzel, Annemarie Horlyck-Romanovsky, Margrethe F. Sumner, Anne E. Int J Environ Res Public Health Article The overall consensus is that foreign-born adults who come to America age < 20 y achieve economic success but develop adverse behaviors (smoking and drinking) that lead to worse cardiometabolic health than immigrants who arrive age ≥ 20 y. Whether age of immigration affects the health of African-born Blacks living in America is unknown. Our goals were to examine cultural identity, behavior, and socioeconomic factors and determine if differences exist in the cardiometabolic health of Africans who immigrated to America before and after age 20 y. Of the 482 enrollees (age: 38 ± 1 (mean ± SE), range: 20–65 y) in the Africans in America cohort, 23% (111/482) arrived age < 20 y, and 77% (371/482) arrived age ≥ 20 y. Independent of francophone status or African region of origin, Africans who immigrated age < 20 y had similar or better cardiometabolic health than Africans who immigrated age ≥ 20 y. The majority of Africans who immigrated age < 20 y identified as African, had African-born spouses, exercised, did not adopt adverse health behaviors, and actualized early life migration advantages, such as an American university education. Due to maintenance of cultural identity and actualization of opportunities in America, cardiometabolic health may be protected in Africans who immigrate before age 20. In short, immigrant health research must be cognizant of the diversity within the foreign-born community and age of immigration. MDPI 2020-12-15 2020-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7765413/ /pubmed/33333954 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17249405 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Shoup, Elyssa M.
Hormenu, Thomas
Osei-Tutu, Nana H.
Ishimwe, M. C. Sage
Patterson, Arielle C.
DuBose, Christopher W.
Wentzel, Annemarie
Horlyck-Romanovsky, Margrethe F.
Sumner, Anne E.
Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study
title Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study
title_full Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study
title_fullStr Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study
title_full_unstemmed Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study
title_short Africans Who Arrive in the United States before 20 Years of Age Maintain Both Cardiometabolic Health and Cultural Identity: Insight from the Africans in America Study
title_sort africans who arrive in the united states before 20 years of age maintain both cardiometabolic health and cultural identity: insight from the africans in america study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7765413/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33333954
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17249405
work_keys_str_mv AT shoupelyssam africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT hormenuthomas africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT oseitutunanah africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT ishimwemcsage africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT pattersonariellec africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT dubosechristopherw africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT wentzelannemarie africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT horlyckromanovskymargrethef africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy
AT sumnerannee africanswhoarriveintheunitedstatesbefore20yearsofagemaintainbothcardiometabolichealthandculturalidentityinsightfromtheafricansinamericastudy