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The impact of migration on the well-being of transnational families: new data from sending communities in Mexico
Authors:Jody Heymann  Francisco Flores-Macias  Jeffrey A. Hayes  Malinda Kennedy  Claudia Lahaie  Alison Earle
Affiliation:1. Institute for Health and Social Policy , McGill University , Montreal, Canada;2. Department of Political Science , Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA, USA;3. Harvard University , Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract:
We present results from a new study of the effects of migration to the USA on the well-being of transnational families in high emigration communities within Mexico. Our survey measured the well-being of family members in a variety of domains: economic, health, education, and child development for a representative sample drawn from high migration municipalities. Compared to those with no recent emigrants to the USA, Mexican households sending non-caregivers to the USA appear to gain economically without contributing to problems faced by children. However, when family caregivers migrate to the USA, the remaining members in Mexico struggle to meet the family's needs and children are more vulnerable to educational, emotional, and health problems. Children in households where a caregiver migrated were more likely to have frequent illnesses (10% vs. 3%, p<0.0001), chronic illness (7% vs. 3%, p=0.011), emotional problems (10% vs. 4%, p=0.006), and behavioral problems (17% vs. 10%, p=0.018) compared with children in households where the migrant was not a caregiver. Research, policy, and program implications of these findings are discussed.
Keywords:migration  transnational families  family well-being  children's health  caregiving  binational families
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