Smoking in Maywood: The unhealthy southern migrant hypothesis among African Americans
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2001
Abstract
Objectives: This paper examines the "unhealthy Southern migrant" hypothesis with regard to cigarette smoking among African Americans. Methods: Using data collected in 1992 from a sample of 1,518 African Americans in Maywood, Illinois, as part of the International Collaborative Study of Hypertension in Blacks, logistic regression analysis was conducted to examine and compare smoking behavior and sociodemographic characteristics of Southern and Midwestern-born respondents. Results: African Americans born in the South were less likely (OR = .69, Cl = 95%, 0.53, 0.90) to be smokers than those born in the Midwest, after controlling for other sociodemographic variables, prior smoking status, and age of arrival to Maywood. Conclusions: The results do not support the "unhealthy Southern migrant" hypothesis, with regard to cigarette smoking, and indicate the need to identify factors that protect Southern-born African-American migrants from smoking.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Ethnicity and Disease
First Page
540
Last Page
547
Recommended Citation
King, G., Polednak, A., Cooper, R., Bendel, R., Woodroffe, A., & Josseran, L. (2001). Smoking in Maywood: The unhealthy southern migrant hypothesis among African Americans. Ethnicity and Disease, 11 (3), 540-547. Retrieved from https://repository.lsu.edu/animalsciences_pubs/1912