Authors

  1. Cancel-Tirado, Doris I. PhD, MPH
  2. Feeney, Sarah L. PhD
  3. Washburn, Isaac J. PhD
  4. Greder, Kimberly A. PhD
  5. Sano, Yoshie PhD

Abstract

This study explores how low-income rural Latino children and their mothers differ from their non-Latino white counterparts in terms of health, well-being, and health care access. A subsample of non-Latino white (n = 201) and Latino (n = 157) children and their mothers was drawn from the Rural Families Speak about Health Project, a multistate, cross-sectional data set developed through mixed purposive sampling methods. Findings suggest that Latino children's families were disadvantaged in terms of child health and access to health care, whereas non-Latino white children's families were disadvantaged in terms of child behavior problems and maternal health and depression.