Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Health Soc Behav. 2015 Nov 18;56(4):438–459. doi: 10.1177/0022146515610617

Appendix Table B.

Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for multinomial logistic regression predicting past-year health care, foreign-born Latinos, Pew/RWJF Hispanic Healthcare Survey, 2007 (n=2783)

Outcome 1, Ref = No cross-border care/no past-year U.S. doctor visit
Outcome 2: Past year cross-border care, with or without past-year U.S. doctor visit
South West
OR 95% CI OR 95% CI
Legal Status (Ref = Naturalized Citizen)
 Legal Permanent Resident .54 (.27, 1.08) .67 (.35, 1.27)
 Neither Citizen nor Legal Permanent Resident .05 *** (.02, .13) .23 *** (.10, .57)

Outcome 3: Past year U.S. doctor visit, without cross-border care

OR 95% CI OR 95% CI
Legal Status (Ref = Naturalized Citizen)
 Legal Permanent Resident .94 (.52, 1.69) .86 (.55, 1.33)
 Neither Citizen nor Legal Permanent Resident .48 * (.24, .93) .68 (.39, 1.20)
*

p<.05,

**

p<.01,

***

p<.001.

Notes: A. Models combine respondents without citizenship or LPR status, regardless of whether the hold another form of government ID, to improve the precision of estimates in stratified models, B. Controls for age, gender, marital status, having at least one kid under 18, education, employment, English proficiency, region of residence, ethno-national origin, years in the U.S., self-rated health status, and health insurance coverage.