Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Mar 1.
Published in final edited form as: Soc Sci Med. 2012 Dec 20;81:79–86. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.12.012

Table 1.

Socio-demographic and immigration measures for a sample of young Latino adults in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area, (n=1268)

Socio-demographic Characteristics
Age, y, mean (SD) 27.7 (0.2)
Female, no. (%) 639 (50.4)
Income, $, no. (%)
      ≤19,999 262 (20.7)
      20000–49,999 590 (46.5)
      ≥ 50,000 416 (32.8)
Educational Attainment, no. (%)
      High school or less (≤12 years) 590 (46.5)
      At least some college (>12) 678 (53.5)
Spanish-language interview, no. (%) 156 (12.3)
Immigration Measures
Generation, no. (%)
      1.5 generation 485 (38.3)
      2nd generation 783 (61.7)
Ethno-national Group, no. (%)
      Mexican/Mexican-American 839 (66.2)
      Central American 429 (33.8)
Age at immigration, y, mean (SD)a 5.8 (0.4)
Respondent Legal Status, no. (%)
      U.S. Citizen 1012 (79.8)
      Legal Permanent Resident (LPR) 171 (13.5)
      Neither U.S. Citizen or LPR 85 (6.7)
At least one parent entered U.S. with documentation, no. (%) 906 (71.5)
Self-rated health status, no. (%)
      Excellent 382 (30.1)
      Very Good 384 (30.3)
      Good 347 (27.4)
      Fair/Poor 155 (12.2)

Source: Intergenerational and Immigrant Mobility in Metropolitan Los Angeles (IIMMLA), 2004.

Notes:

a

Age at arrival calculated for foreign-born (1.5 generation) respondents only.