PMID: 16528949Mar 15, 2006Paper

The role of reported primary race on health measures for multiple race respondents in the National Health Interview Survey

Public Health Reports
Jennifer D Parker

Abstract

As data for multiple race groups have only recently been collected and tabulated, the current understanding of the health of multiple race groups is not well developed. In the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), survey respondents who report more than one race are asked to identify a primary race. This report compares selected health and demographic measures by the response to the primary race question and compares estimates for specific primary race groups to corresponding estimates for single race groups. Using 1997-2003 NHIS data, several demographic and health measures were compared by reported primary race within the four largest multiple race groups. Then estimates by primary race for these four multiple race groups were compared to those for their single race counterparts. There were few statistically significant associations between reported primary race and health or demographic variables within the four multiple race groups. This lack of association may be due to the small number of multiple race respondents (which results in large standard errors) rather than similarity of point estimates among the subgroups. A greater number of differences between estimates for single race groups and for multiple race responden...Continue Reading

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