Summary: Korean
immigrants report worse self-rated health and a higher self-employment rate
than other Asian immigrant groups, the relationship between their employment
type and self-rated health is understudied. This study examines the
relationship between employment type and self-rated health among Korean
immigrants in the U.S. Survey data of 421 first-generation working-age (18–64
years old) Korean immigrants in the New York–New Jersey area were analyzed. The
self-administrated survey questionnaire included 39 items (e.g.,
sociodemographic characteristics, self-rated health, and health insurance
status). A logistic regression analysis was conducted to examine the
relationship between the dependent variable — self-rated health (e.g., bad/not
bad vs. good/very good) — and independent variable — employment type (e.g.,
work at non-ethnic firms, work at co-ethnic firms, self-employed, and
unemployed) — by focusing on differences regarding gender and number of years
living in the U.S.
Findings: Self-employed
and unemployed Korean immigrants were less likely to report good health
compared to those working in non-ethnic firms. After controlling for
sociodemographic characteristics (age, gender, marital status, education,
health insurance status, membership in any Korean association, religion, and
English proficiency), the relationship between employment type and self-rated
health remained significant among female and recent Korean immigrants. More
worksite interventions by occupational health nurses that target self-employed
Korean immigrants, especially women and recent immigrants, are necessary.