# Unseen Burdens: How ACEs and Citizenship Status Shape Health in Aging Latinx Populations

**Authors:** Alein Haro-Ramos

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1657 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

The paper explores how childhood trauma and citizenship status affect health in older Latinx adults, finding that noncitizens with traumatic childhoods report worse health.

## Contribution

This study reveals the compounded impact of adverse childhood experiences and noncitizen status on health outcomes in aging Latinx populations.

## Key findings

- Noncitizen Latinx adults with high ACE exposure report significantly worse self-rated health.
- The relationship between ACEs and poor health is strongest among noncitizen Latinx individuals.
- Adjusting for citizenship status and ACEs together increases the predictive power for poor health outcomes.

## Abstract

Citizenship (or the lack thereof) and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are both independent predictors of poor self-rated health (SRH), but we know little about their cumulative effects among older Latinx adults. Using a life course perspective, we examine 1) the relationship between ACEs, citizenship status, and poor SRH and 2) whether race-ethnicity-citizenship status combinations modify the association between ACEs and SRH.

Latinx and White adult respondents age 50+ were selected from the 2021 and 2022 California Health Interview Survey (n = 20,491). Generalized linear models (logit link, binomial family) estimated the relationship between ethnicity-citizenship status, ACEs, and SRH. We use an interaction between ethnicity-citizenship and ACEs to test for a moderating effect on SRH.

High ACE exposure and noncitizen status were each significant predictors of poor SRH, adjusting for covariates. In the mutually adjusted model, including ACEs and citizenship status, the magnitude of the coefficient for naturalized and noncitizen Latinx adults and for each ACE score increased. The association between ACEs and poor SRH was strongest among noncitizen Latinx adults.

ACEs and citizenship status are significant predictors of poor SRH, and the relationship between ACEs and SRH is pronounced among noncitizen Latinx older adults. Our findings underscore the importance of addressing early and later life experiences to understand and improve the health and well-being of older Latinx individuals, particularly those lacking citizenship.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761973