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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Feb 5.
Published in final edited form as: Ann Behav Med. 2018 Feb 5;52(2):186–193. doi: 10.1093/abm/kax007

Worry about Deportation and Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors among Adult Women: The Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) Study

Jacqueline M Torres 1, Julianna Deardorff 2, Robert B Gunier 3, Kim G Harley 4, Abbey Alkon 5, Katherine Kogut 6, Brenda Eskenazi 7
PMCID: PMC5858722  NIHMSID: NIHMS921421  PMID: 29538629

Abstract

Background

U.S. Latinos report high levels of concern about deportation for themselves or others. No previous research has tested the link between worry about deportation and clinical measures of cardiovascular risk.

Purpose

We estimate the associations between worry about deportation and clinically measured cardiovascular risk factors.

Methods

Data come from the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas study. The analytic sample includes 545 Mexican-origin women.

Results

In multivariable models, reporting a lot of worry about deportation was significantly associated with higher body mass index (BMI), an increased risk of obesity (relative to normal weight), larger waist circumference, and higher pulse pressure. Reporting moderate deportation worry was significantly associated with an increased risk of overweight (relative to normal weight) and higher systolic blood pressure. Significant associations between worry about deportation and higher BMI, waist circumference, and pulse pressure, respectively, held after correcting for multiple testing at p<0.05.

Conclusions

Worry about deportation may be an important cardiovascular risk factor for ethnic minority populations in the U.S.

Keywords: Body mass index, hypertension, blood pressure, minority health, social determinants of health

INTRODUCTION

Researchers and policy makers have become increasingly interested in the health impacts of immigration policies, including fear related to these policies (15). Immigrant deportations in the U.S. have increased over the past decade, from an estimated 189,000 deportations in 2001 to a peak of 435,000 in 2013, declining to 333,000 deportations in 2015 (6). Increased deportation, as well as increased collaboration between local law enforcement officers and federal immigration authorities (e.g. under the national Secure Communities program, 2008–2014) has contributed to widespread worry about deportation, including among U.S.-born individuals (3, 7). In a 2010 national survey, 46% of U.S. and foreign-born Latinos reported that they worried about the deportation of themselves, a family member, or close friend (8). The results of a similar survey fielded between December 2016 and January 2017 suggest a persistently high prevalence of deportation worry – 47% of both U.S. and foreign-born Latinos reported deportation worry, ranging from a third of U.S.-born Latinos to two-thirds of foreign-born Latinos who are not U.S. citizens (9).

Prior research has documented significant associations between self-reported worry about deportation and depression and anxiety (10, 11), poorer self-rated health (12, 13), and lower rates of health care utilization (5, 14, 15). No quantitative research, to our knowledge, has examined associations between worry about deportation and clinically measured health outcomes that may be risk factors for cardiovascular disease and other chronic conditions. Qualitative studies, however, have suggested potential links between worry about deportation and cardiovascular risk factors. In focus groups, immigrant respondents in the northeastern U.S. reported elevated blood pressures, in addition to increased depression, anxiety and sleep disturbances as the result of being targeted by immigration authorities (7, 16). In in-depth interviews during a time of aggressive immigration enforcement efforts, Mexican-origin mothers in Arizona reported restricting travel for the purchase of healthy foods and limiting outdoor physical activity in order to avoid contact with authorities (3). If sustained over time, these behavioral adaptations to the local political climate might contribute to increased risk for overweight and obesity. While Mexican-origin individuals are at lower risk for cardiovascular disease compared to other populations in the U.S. (17, 18), traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as overweight and obesity are associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes among U.S. Latinos (19, 20).

In the present study, we examine associations between self-reported worry about deportation and measured cardiovascular disease risk factors among a sample of primarily Mexican-origin women. We hypothesize that higher levels of worry about deportation are associated with higher values on key modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, including body mass index, waist circumference, and blood pressure (21, 22).

Data for the analysis comes from the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS), a longitudinal birth cohort study of women and their children born in the Salinas Valley, an agricultural area located in the inland region of Monterey County, California. Although Monterey County is one of the wealthiest counties in the state, the Salinas Valley is predominantly low-income and Latino. The “Secure Communities” (SCOMM) program was enacted in Monterey County in 2010. As of February 2015 there were 2,384 removals and returns under the program for a population of 431,300 (2014) (5.52 per 1,000 pop.); by comparison, there were 35,750 removals and returns in Los Angeles County during the same period for a population of 10.2 million (3.57 per 1,000 pop.) (23).

METHOD

Detailed information on the CHAMACOS study has been published elsewhere (24). Briefly, the first cohort (CHAM1) of women was recruited during pregnancy from Salinas Valley community clinics between October 1999 and October 2000. Eligible women were ≥18 years of age, English or Spanish-speaking, eligible for Medi-Cal (a state subsidized medical insurance plan), < 20 weeks gestation, and had plans to deliver at the county hospital. From an initial sample of 1,130 pregnant women, 601 agreed to participate in the study and 531 remained in the study at the time of delivery. Women who declined to participate were more likely to be U.S.-born and English speaking, although they had similar age and parity compared to those who agreed to join. Participants were followed until their child reached 12 years of age. A second cohort of 305 mothers of 9-year-old children (CHAM2) was recruited to join the study between January 2010 and September 2011 when the CHAM1 children were 9 years of age. Eligibility criteria for new participants matched those of the initial cohort (i.e. during her pregnancy with the participating child, the mother was ≥18 years, Spanish or English-speaking, Medi-Cal eligible, and received prenatal care at a low-income healthcare provider in the Salinas Valley).

Although participants were assessed at multiple time points starting at baseline, data for the current analyses are from visits completed between March 2012 and August 2014, when mothers were first asked about worry about deportation. A total of 594 mothers (316 from CHAM 1 and 278 from CHAM 2) were surveyed as part of this visit, when participating children were 12 years old. Compared to women who enrolled at baseline, women who completed the 12-year visit were significantly older (about 2 years) and less likely to speak Spanish at home, but were not different in terms of nativity, years spent in the U.S. (for foreign-born respondents), educational attainment, or poverty status. We also excluded 49 women who were pregnant or had unknown pregnancy status at time of their assessment for a total analytic sample of 545 mothers. There were no significant differences in level of deportation worry for those excluded from the analytic sample due to pregnancy status compared to those included.

The majority of assessments were completed in the research office, although about 8% of assessments were completed in participants’ homes. Written informed consent was obtained from all women in the study. All informed consent and study procedures were approved by the University of California, Berkeley’s Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects.

Worry about deportation

Mothers were interviewed in either Spanish or English by trained bilingual, bicultural staff members using structured surveys. Participants were asked the following question: “We know that many families are worried about deportation, either for themselves or for their family and friends. How much worry would you say this causes you?” Response categories were: “not too much worry,” “a moderate amount of worry,” or “a lot of worry”.

Health outcomes

Body mass index assessments were based on a single weight measurement taken principally using a digital Tanita bioimpedence scale (Tanita TBF-300A Body Composition Analyzer, Tanita Corporation, Arlington Heights, IL), although approximately 13% of the women had weight measured with a digital scale (Tanita Baby and Mommy 1582, Tanita Corporation, Arlington Heights, IL) due to personal preference or assessment in the home. Barefoot standing height was measured with a wall-mounted stadiometer (Seca 222, Chino, CA). We analyzed a continuous BMI measure as well as a three-category measure indicating normal weight (BMI <25), overweight (≥ 25 and <30), and obesity (≥30). No participants were classified as underweight (i.e. BMI < 18.5). Waist circumference was measured in triplicate by placing a measuring tape around the mothers’ abdomen midway between the iliac crest and the inferior margin of the ribs, and parallel to the floor; the average of the three measurements was calculated and used in analyses.

Blood pressure was measured with an automated oscillometric monitor (Dinamap XL 9300, Critikon Inc, Tampa, FL) that was calibrated annually. The monitor was placed on the left arm of participants after two minutes of rest. Three measurements were taken with one minute of rest between measurements and the average of the second two measurements was used for these analyses. We created a binary measure of hypertension, classifying maternal participants as hypertensive if they had a measured systolic blood pressure of > 140 mm/Hg, a diastolic blood pressure of > 90 mm/Hg, or self-reported ever having been diagnosed with hypertension by a doctor or currently taking anti-hypertensive medication. We additionally examined continuous systolic and diastolic blood pressure, pulse pressure (systolic minus diastolic blood pressure) and mean arterial pressure (systolic plus three times diastolic blood pressure over three). There is evidence that each of these measurements is uniquely related to a wide range of cardiovascular endpoints (25), and that continuous measures of blood pressure may provide information about cardiovascular risk obscured by binary measures (26).

Covariates

We controlled for respondents’ age in years, marital status (married/living with partner vs. single/divorced/widowed), education (≤ 6th grade, > 6th but < 12th grade, and ≥ 12th grade), and family income-to-poverty ratio. Given evidence that cardiovascular risk increases with longer time in the U.S. and/or birth in the U.S. (i.e. being second or third generation) (27), we included a composite measure of nativity and years of residence in the U.S. (≤ 15 years in the U.S., > 15 and ≤ 20 years in the U.S., > 20 years in the U.S., and U.S.-born). We also controlled for respondents’ preferred language spoken in the home (either Spanish or English) to account for the possible contribution of acculturation factors above and beyond duration in the U.S. to cardiovascular risk. To protect the participants’ safety and confidentiality, we did not ask about their citizenship or documentation status.

Statistical Analysis

Analyses were completed using STATA v.14. We first examined descriptive characteristics by levels of worry about deportation. We then estimated a series of multivariable models regressing each of the respective health outcomes on mothers’ reported worry about deportation, adjusting for covariates. We completed a number of ancillary analyses. First, given the possibility that the association between deportation worry and health outcomes might vary by respondents’ nativity, we tested interaction terms between deportation worry and nativity. Next, given the possibility that underlying depression might be driving both worry about deportation and cardiovascular risk factors (28), we re-estimated the models controlling for respondents’ prior depression. Depressive symptoms were last measured among CHAMACOS respondents three years prior to being asked about worry about deportation, using the 20-item Centers for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CESD) scale. We contrasted respondents who had scores of ≥16 on the CESD with those who had scores of <16 (29). We nevertheless consider results without control for depression as those of primary interest. Although the data do not allow for us to accurately characterize the temporal order between depression and deportation worry, worry about deportation could pre-date depression, with depression serving as a potential mediator between deportation worry and measured cardiovascular risk factors. Controlling for potential mediators of the primary association of interest may be over-control.

Finally, given the low prevalence of hypertension in the sample, we estimated the association between deportation worry and an outcome of pre-hypertension (i.e. systolic blood pressure > 120 mm/Hg, diastolic blood pressure > 80 mm/Hg, prior diagnosis of hypertension, or taking anti-hypertensive medication).

Ordinary least squares regression was used for continuous outcomes, logistic regression was used for the binary outcome of hypertension, and multinomial logistic regression was used for the three-category measure of weight status. Standardized mean differences by categories of worry about deportation were estimated for continuous outcomes (30). Missing data on covariates were handled using multiple imputation with chained equations. A total of 10 imputed datasets were created and coefficients and standard errors were averaged across all of the datasets (31). We adjusted for multiple testing with the False Discovery Rate method (32).

RESULTS

Just fewer than 28% of respondents reported “not too much” worry about deportation for themselves or others, 24% reported a moderate amount of worry, and nearly half of respondents reported a lot of worry about deportation (Table 1). Respondents were almost 40 years old on average and two- thirds were still living with or married to the father of their child. Among the overall sample, 88% of women were foreign-born and 12% were born in the U.S. The majority of respondents spoke primarily Spanish in the home, ranging from 72% of women who reported not too much worry about deportation to 96% of women reporting a lot of worry about deportation. Two-thirds of women who reported not too much worry had completed a high school education or more, compared with 26% of those who reported moderate worry and 14% of women who reported a lot of worry about deportation. Those reporting not too much worry had a mean income-to-poverty ratio of 0.9 (± 0.4) while those reported a lot of worry had a mean income-to-poverty ratio of 0.7 (± 0.3).

Table 1.

Descriptive statistics for demographic characteristics by level of worry about deportation, Mexican-origin women in the Salinas Valley, CA: Center for Health Assessment of Mothers and Child of Salinas (CHAMACOS) study, Salinas, CA, 2012–2014

Total (n=545) Not too much worry (n=151) A moderate amount of worry (n=129) A lot of worry (n=265) Test of significant difference
Age, years, M ± SD 39.0 ± 5.3 38.3 ± 5.3 39.3 ± 5.5 39.3 ± 5.3 F=1.9, NS
Currently married/living with partner, n (%) 376 (69.0) 97 (64.2) 92 (71.3) 187 (70.6) χ2=2.2, NS
Educational attainment, n (%)
  ≤ 6th grade 233 (42.8) 49 (32.5) 44 (34.1) 140 (52.8)
  7–12th grade 185 (33.9) 47 (31.1) 51 (39.5) 87 (32.8)
  ≥12th grade 127 (23.3) 55 (36.4) 34 (26.4) 38 (14.3) χ2=34.7, p<.001
Family income-to-poverty ratio, M ± SD 0.8 ± 0.4 0.9 ± 0.4 0.8 ± 0.3 0.7 ± 0.3 F=14.9, p<.001
Years in the U.S./nativity, n (%)
  ≤ 15 years 170 (31.3) 28 (18.5) 37 (28.7) 105 (39.8)
  16–20 years 153 (28.1) 32 (21.2) 41 (31.8) 80 (30.3)
  ≥21 years 156 (28.7) 50 (33.1) 36 (27.9) 70 (26.5)
  U.S.-born 66 (12.0) 41 (27.2) 15 (11.6) 10 (3.4) χ2=66.7, p<.001
Speak primarily Spanish in the home, n (%) 475 (87.2) 109 (72.2) 113 (87.6) 253 (95.5) χ2=46.6, p<.001
Body mass index, M ± SD 31.4 (6.5) 30.9 (6.6) 30.9 (6.0) 31.9 (6.6) F=1.76, NS
Body mass index categories, n (%)
 Normal weight 69 (12.7) 27 (17.9) 13 (10.1) 29 (10.9)
 Overweight 189 (34.7) 45 (29.8) 57 (44.2) 87 (32.8)
 Obeses 287 (52.7) 79 (52.3) 59 (45.7) 149 (56.2) χ2=11.0, p<.05
Waist circumference, cm, M ± SD 101.9±15.6 100.7±16.6 101.0±14.0 103.1±15.6 F=1.5, NS
Hypertension, n (%) 107 (19.6) 28 (18.5) 24 (18.6) 55 (20.8) χ2=0.4, NS
Systolic blood pressure, mm Hg, M ± SD 113.6±14.8 112.1±14.0 115.3±15.8 113.7±14.8 F=1.7, NS
Diastolic blood pressure, mm Hg, M ± SD 66.0±9.6 66.1±9.9 67.5±9.6 65.1± 9.4 F=2.7, NS
Mean arterial pressure, mm Hg, M ± SD 81.9±10.6 81.4±10.6 83.5±11.0 81.3±10.3 F=1.9, NS
Pulse pressure, mm Hg, M ± SD 47.6±10.0 45.9±8.9 47.8±10.3 48.5±10.5 F=3.3, p<.05

Mean (±SD) BMI was 30.9 (±6.6); just under 13% of respondents were classified as having a BMI in the normal range, 34.7% were categorized as overweight and 52.7% were classified as obese. Respondents had a mean (±SD) waist circumference of 102 cm (± 15.6). Nearly 20% of women were classified as having hypertension. The mean (±SD) systolic blood pressure was 113.6 (± 14.8) mm Hg and the average diastolic blood pressure was 66.0 (± 19.6) mm Hg. Mean (±SD) arterial pressure was 81.9 (±10.6) mm Hg and mean (±15.6) pulse pressure was 47 (± 10.0) mm Hg for the sample.

There was a significant association between reporting a lot of worry about deportation and higher body mass index (β: 2.07; 95% CI: 0.69, 3.45), adjusting for covariates. The results of multinomial logistic regression of deportation worry on body mass index categories show that those reporting moderate worry about deportation were more than twice as likely to be overweight relative to normal weight (RRR: 2.39, 95% CI: 1.07, 5.33). Similarly, those reporting a lot of worry about deportation were twice as likely to be categorized as obese relative to normal weight based on their body mass index (RRR: 2.06; 95% CI: 1.06, 3.98), controlling for covariates. Reporting a lot of worry about deportation was associated with significantly larger waist circumference (β: 4.99; 95% CI: 1.70, 8.28) relative to reporting not too much worry, all else equal.

Reporting moderate worry about deportation was associated with significantly higher systolic blood pressure (β: 3.71; 95% CI: 0.06, 7.34) relative to reporting not too much worry. Reporting a lot of worry about deportation was significantly associated with higher pulse pressure (β: 3.20; 95% CI: 1.02, 5.39) relative to reporting not too much worry. There were no significant associations between worry about deportation and hypertension (or pre-hypertension, tested in ancillary analyses), diastolic blood pressure, or mean arterial pressure. The results of ancillary analyses suggest no significant interaction effects between deportation worry and nativity across the models. Significant associations between worry about deportation and continuous measures of body mass index, waist circumference, and pulse pressure, respectively, held at p<0.05 even after accounting for multiple testing.

Ancillary analyses show that those with prior depression were significantly more likely to report a lot of worry about deportation versus report not too much worry about deportation (Appendix Table A). The reported results held after controlling for respondents’ prior depression in ancillary multivariate analyses (Appendix Table B). In this set of additional analyses, the association between worry about deportation and pulse pressure was statistically significant at p<0.05 after accounting for multiple testing; the associations between worry about deportation and continuous measures of body mass index and waist circumference, respectively, held at p<0.10.

DISCUSSION

This is the first study to our knowledge to empirically examine the association between worry about deportation and measured cardiovascular risk factors. We found that worry about deportation was significantly associated with higher body mass index, greater risk of overweight and obesity, and significantly larger waist circumference among a sample of Mexican-origin adult women in California’s Salinas Valley. The significant associations between a lot of worry about deportation and continuous BMI and waist circumference measures, respectively, held after accounting for multiple testing.

We did not observe significant associations between deportation worry and hypertension or continuous measures of diastolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure. However, deportation worry was associated with higher systolic blood pressure, which has been linked to congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, and stable angina, as well as higher pulse pressure, which has been shown to be a significant predictor of congestive heart failure and peripheral arterial disease (25, 33). The relationship between deportation worry and higher pulse pressure remained significant even after accounting for multiple testing.

We note that the findings held even when controlling for measures of socio-economic status and, importantly, time spent in the U.S. and nativity. Furthermore, we found no evidence of significant interactions between deportation worry and measures of nativity or time in the U.S., although the sample may have been too small to extensively explore interactions. Alternatively, the lack of significant interactions may reflect the possibility that worry about deportation similarly affects the health of U.S.-born individuals who are concerned about family members at risk for deportation (5, 6).

Although past research on the health effects of worry about deportation has been limited, the broader literature on the health impacts of psychosocial stress in general sheds light on a number of potential mechanisms driving the association between worry about deportation and cardiovascular risk factors. Societal stressors that persist over time may impact cardiovascular disease risk by way of chronic activation of the stress response system, including faster heart rate, greater inflammation, and heightened immune response to pathogens already present in the body (34, 35). Stress may also be linked to cardiovascular risk through adverse impacts on sleep duration and quality (36, 37) and reduced physical activity (38). Worry about deportation could also compound the adverse cardiovascular impacts of other acute and chronic stressors, including financial and occupational strain and discrimination (39).

There are several limitations to consider. For one, the sample is geographically limited to a particular agricultural region of California and is comprised of low-income, primarily Mexican-born women, which restricts the generalizability of the results to other regions and to other immigrant and U.S.-born groups. Second, the analysis is cross-sectional, which limits our ability to establish a causal relationship between deportation worry and cardiovascular risk factors. We attempted to address the possibility that prior depression might be driving both levels of worry and cardiovascular risk factors, thereby confounding the results. In ancillary analyses, we did find that prior depression was significantly associated with worry about deportation. However, the results linking worry about deportation and measured cardiovascular outcomes largely held even when controlling for prior depression. Another limitation is that the exposure measure is a single item and its psychometric properties are unknown. There was no valid, reliable measure of worry about deportation available at the time this wave of data was collected, although the question is similar to one utilized by the Pew Research Center in national surveys (8, 9).

Conclusion

Researchers and policy makers have expressed concern about the impact of immigration policies and worry about deportation on the health and wellbeing of immigrants and their family members. While prior research has examined the association between worry about deportation and self-reported outcomes, this is the first study to our knowledge to test the association between deportation worry and measured cardiovascular risk factors. Among a sample of Mexican-origin women in California’s Salinas Valley, we found that worry about deportation was significantly associated with cardiovascular risk factors, including body mass index, waist circumference, and measures of systolic and pulse pressure, after controlling for potential confounders. These findings should be viewed in light of policy efforts that may either exacerbate or alleviate the burden of worry about deportation among immigrants and their family members. Policies that mitigate worry about deportation might have potentially beneficial consequences for the cardiovascular risk profiles of individuals who are themselves undocumented or have undocumented family and community members. In contrast, policies that lead to increased worry about deportation may have adverse downstream impacts on cardiovascular risk.

Supplementary Material

Supplemental Tables

Table 2.

Regression results for cardiovascular risk factors by level of worry about deportation, Mexican-origin women in Salinas Valley, CA, (n=545): Center for Health Assessment of Mothers and Child of Salinas (CHAMACOS) study, Salinas, CA, 2012–2014

Body Mass Index, Continuous
β 95% CI Standardized Mean Difference
Not too much worry Ref Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 0.79 (−0.73, 2.32) d= 0.12
A lot of worry 2.07**§ (0.69, 3.45) d= 0.30

Overweight vs. Normal Weight

RRR 95% CI

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 2.39* (1.07, 5.33)
A lot of worry 1.54 (0.77, 3.11)

Obese vs. Normal Weight

RRR 95% CI

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 1.70 (0.78, 3.68)
A lot of worry 2.06* (1.06, 3.98)

Waist Circumference, Continuous

β 95% CI Standardized Mean Difference

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 2.27 (−1.40, 5.95) d=0.15
A lot of worry 4.99**§ (1.70, 8.28) d=0.30

Hypertension

OR 95% CI

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 0.94 (0.49, 1.79)
A lot of worry 1.10 (0.62, 1.94)

Systolic Blood Pressure

β 95% CI Standardized Mean Difference

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 3.71* (0.06, 7.34) d=0.24
A lot of worry 2.90 (−0.30, 6.10) d=0.18

Diastolic Blood Pressure

β 95% CI Standardized Mean Difference

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 1.54 (−0.86, 3.94) d=0.15
A lot of worry −0.30 (−2.40, 1.80) d=0.03

Mean Arterial Pressure

β 95% CI Standardized Mean Difference

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 2.26 (−0.37, 4.89) d=0.20
A lot of worry 0.77 (−1.53, 3.06) d=0.07

Pulse Pressure

β 95% CI Standardized Mean Difference

Not too much worry Ref Ref
A moderate amount of worry 2.17 (−0.28, 4.61) d=0.21
A lot of worry 3.20**§ (1.02, 5.39) d=0.29
*

p<.05,

**

p<.01,

***

p<.001,

§

p<0.05 after correcting for multiple testing with the False Discovery Rate.

Note: Controlling for respondents’ age, education, whether married or living with child’s father, time in the U.S./nativity, preference to speak Spanish in the home, and family income-to-poverty rate.

Acknowledgments

We thank the CHAMACOS staff, students, community partners, and participants and families. We would like to thank Megan Johnson, William Martinez, and Mienah Sharif for their comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript. This work was funded by research grant numbers P01 ES009605 and R01 ES015572 from the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)(Eskenazi, PI) and R 82670901, RD 83171001, and RD 83451301 from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)(Eskenazi PI). J.M.T. was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholars program while carrying out the analyses. The contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the funders.

Footnotes

Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Contributor Information

Jacqueline M. Torres, Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, 550 16th Street San Francisco, CA 94143.

Julianna Deardorff, Division of Community Health and Human Development, UC Berkeley School of Public Health.

Robert B. Gunier, Center for Environmental Research and Children’s Health (CERCH), UC Berkeley School of Public Health.

Kim G. Harley, Center for Environmental Research and Children’s Health (CERCH), Division of Community Health and Human Development, UC Berkeley School of Public Health.

Abbey Alkon, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco.

Katherine Kogut, Center for Environmental Research and Children’s Health (CERCH), UC Berkeley School of Public Health.

Brenda Eskenazi, Division of Community Health and Human Development; Center for Environmental Research and Children’s Health (CERCH), UC Berkeley School of Public Health.

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