Abstract: | Utilizing a cluster sampling design to maximize representativeness, we look at the health effects of acculturation and acculturation stressors among 1,001 adult migrant farmworkers in Fresno, California. Using self‐ratings of mental and physical health as well as the CES‐D depression scale, we find that the amount of time one spends in the United States, the level of English‐language usage, as well as the intensity of acculturation stresses that one reports, are all related to declines in health. In addition, acculturation stress has more deleterious effects on self‐rated health (both physical and mental) among the more highly acculturated. |