Want to Live Longer? Look
to the Latin Lifestyle
By
David E. Hayes-Bautista
America's
baby-boomer generation is graying-and the programs that today's elderly depend
upon to keep them out of poverty and in relative good health may run out of
money just when the baby boomers become eligible to tap them. Medicare, by most
estimates, will be broke by 2003. Social Security may go bust around 2009. The
first baby boomers turn 65 in 20 10. Raw can they and their generation conceive
of a comfortable, secure old age?
Multicultural
Los Angeles may offer a model. The largely Anglo baby-6oomer generation would
do well to look not to their parents, but to Latino, senior citizens for hints
of how to adjust to and enjoy their twilight years.
This
suggestion may come as a surprise. Discussions about Latinos typically focus on
their youth, their fertility rates and their children. After all, the median
age of Latinos is more than 10 years younger than that of Anglos. But our
emphasis on the youthful character of the Latino population obscures a
compelling fact: Not only is America graying, the elderly are increasingly
Latino. . -
This
trend has remained largely unnoticed because of a widely shared stereotype:
Because Latinos are a minority, many assumed that they, like other minorities,
have shorter life expectancies. Even many pro-Latino advocacy groups believe
that Latino seniors "five fewer total years, have fewer years of
retirement and spend more time disabled." One researcher even contended
that elderly Latinos and blacks should be allowed to retire earlier, on the
ground that they die younger and thus receive few, if any, Social Security
benefits.
But
the reality is quite different. An Anglo baby born in Los Angeles County has a
life expectancy of 73.9 years (both sexes combined). The Latino baby in the
adjacent bassinet has a life expectancy, of 78.0 years, nearly four years
longer. Put another way, the Anglo baby can expect 8.9 years of senior
citizenship beyond age 65, while his Latino counterpart can look forward to
12.9 years. In part due to migration patterns, the number of Anglo elderly in.
the county has been shrinking for 20 years, yielding a 10-year growth rate of
about minus-7% w ' bile Latino elderly growth rate is about 82%.
Elderly
Latinos in the county, moreover, have lower death rates than Anglos for heart
disease, cancer, stroke, pneumonia, homicide, suicide and cirrhosis. Elderly
Latinos die of such cause at a rate nearly 40% lower than that of Anglos,
except for diabetes.
With
Medicare facing bankruptcy, the health patterns of Latino seniors merit much
closer investigation, because their longer life expectancy is not the result of
greater use of hospitals and doctors. Quite the contrary, for example, in 1990
an Anglo senior, on average, generated $13,800 in- hospital charges. By
contrast, his Latino counterpart was billed $3,600 during her hospital stay.
Latino
senior citizens use hospitals less, yet live longer and die less of heart
disease, cancer or stroke. This is good news for Medicare. How do they do it?
While
more data are necessary to answer this question definitively, most analysts
aware of the seeming paradox of longer life expectancies for Latinos point to
lifestyle as a determinant. Chief among the "habits of the Latino
heart" are the importance of family, the maintenance of a work ethic, the
role of religion and the formation of community.
One
hotly debated idea to save Social Security from bankruptcy is to raise the
retirement age by a few years. For elderly Latinos, working longer is already a
way of life. Their labor force participation rate at age 65 and older far exceeds
that of their Anglo counterparts. Furthermore, after contributing so much for
so long, Latino seniors are much less likely than Anglos, to tap Social
Security. While 88% of Anglo seniors receive Social Security payments, only 54%
of elderly Latinos do. Yet, working elderly Latinos are bedeviled by the same
problem that affects Latino workers of all ages: Although they work more, they
are more likely to live in poverty.
It
is important to note that the average Latino senior is an immigrant who has been
living in the United States for 31 years. He or she arrived in this country
when relatively young and has worked for' more than the40 quarters required by
Social Security. Unfortunately, many of the jobs once held by today's Latino
seniors were not covered by Social Security. After all, in 1956, 52% of Latino
mates, were either farm workers or unskilled laborers.
But
while senior Anglos are much more likely to rely on institutional support, elderly Latinos tend to
lean on family to offset the lack of Social Security income. In Los Angeles
County, 21% of the Latino seniors receive cash income from their adult
children. By contrast, only 2% of elderly Anglos receive financial assistance
from their adult children. Of course, Latinos in Los Angeles are more than
twice as likely as Anglos to marry and have children. And Latino parents are
eager to invest in their children, often at great personal sacrifice. Later in
life, their investment appears to pay off in the form of productive and
appreciative children. Today's working-age, U.S.-born Latinos are 80% less
likely to live in poverty than their parents.
Berkeley
epidemiologist Len Syme has concluded that one's family and social networks are
the best predictors of health status. Nearly a century ago, Emil Durkheim found
that persons with active family relations were less likely to commit suicide.
While a numerical value has yet to be assigned to it, Latinos' tendency to form
families is doubtless another reason for their strong health profile.
Stanford
researcher Marilyn Winkleby has also found that though Anglo adults demonstrate
better knowledge of diet and nutrition than Latino adults, when it comes to
actual consumption, Latino adults tend to have healthier eating habits. She
notes that, overall, Latino meals are richer in vegetables and legumes, and
leaner in meats.
A
full religious life is another promoter of longer life. Compared with Anglo,
seniors, Latinos are twice as likely to be a member of an organized church, and
their church of choice is Roman Catholic. These seniors are not simply Catholic
in name only. Elderly Latinos are more than twice as likely as Anglos to attend
a church service at least every two weeks. Religious observance can reduce
stress by promoting a sense of belonging and a heightened sense of well-being.
Studies
have shown that religious faith can have a positive effect on health, physical,
mental and social. A, recent Hebrew University study comparing religious
kibbutz members with secular kibbutz members discovered that members of the
former had far lower death rates for all major causes of death. The researchers
were themselves surprised at finding the "embracing protective effect of
religious observance."
The
notion of koinonia (community), so much a part of Latino Catholic
culture, appears to have many positive payoffs for the lives of elderly
Latinos. Religious prescriptions and proscriptions on behavior urging self
-discipline, responsibility to others and faith can also protect people from
threats to their health.
Working
longer, living healthier lives, relying more on family, making less use of
Social Security and Medicare-these are not impossible policy decisions: These
are personal decisions already made by many Latino senior citizens living in
California. Yet, their life expectancy is not correspondingly shortened.
The
habits of the Latino heart--family and diet, religion, work and culture--make
for a profile that results in healthier and longer life. As America grays and
old-age programs become financially strapped, it's worth pondering the Latino
model as a way to avoid a calamitous retirement.
David
E. Hayes-Bautista, an associate editor at Pacific News Service, is executive
director of the Center for the Study of Latino Health at the UCLA School of
Medicine.