Yu E S, Liu W T
Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health, San Diego State University, CA 92182.
Am J Public Health. 1992 Dec;82(12):1645-52. doi: 10.2105/ajph.82.12.1645.
In spite of over 30 years of periodic nationwide surveys, we have thus far only the most rudimentary estimates of the determinants of the health of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. This paper explores ways to improve the capability of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) to collect national health data on these populations.
The NCHS "race" coding practices are reviewed, their limitations stated, ways to improve the numerator and denominator data discussed, and a research agenda presented.
Resources can be intensified to produce better denominator data, and to improve the collection of detailed ethnicity information for the numerators, in at least the three states (California, New York, and Hawaii) where the majority of Asian/Pacific Islanders lived in 1990. Subsequently, these efforts should be extended to the 10 states where 79% of these individuals reside or to the top 15 metropolitan areas where they are concentrated.
If the recommendations are implemented, several coordinated multisite, multiwave epidemiologic surveys can be conducted using standardized interview instruments and data collection procedures that will capitalize on the geographic distribution of Asian/Pacific Islanders.
尽管进行了30多年的全国定期调查,但到目前为止,我们对亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民健康状况的决定因素只有最基本的估计。本文探讨了提高国家卫生统计中心(NCHS)收集这些人群全国健康数据能力的方法。
回顾了NCHS的“种族”编码做法,指出了其局限性,讨论了改善分子和分母数据的方法,并提出了一项研究议程。
可以加强资源投入,以产生更好的分母数据,并改善分子中详细种族信息的收集,至少在1990年大多数亚裔/太平洋岛民居住的三个州(加利福尼亚州、纽约州和夏威夷州)。随后,这些努力应扩展到这些人居住的79%的10个州,或他们集中居住的前15个大都市区。
如果实施这些建议,就可以使用标准化的访谈工具和数据收集程序进行几次协调的多地点、多阶段流行病学调查,这将利用亚裔/太平洋岛民的地理分布情况。