Williams D R
Department of Sociology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520.
Ethn Dis. 1992 Spring;2(2):126-41.
This review summarizes current knowledge about the social sources of differences in blood pressure between blacks and whites in the United States. Genetic variables may play some role in explaining black-white differences in blood pressure, but social factors are more important than genetic ones. I review evidence linking stress, social integration, coping styles, and health behavior (including obesity) to high blood pressure, emphasizing that the distribution of these risk factors is shaped by larger social structures and processes. Effective efforts to reduce stress and improve health practices must not focus only on the individual but must seek to alter the social, economic, and political structures and arrangements that produce disease.
本综述总结了当前关于美国黑人和白人血压差异的社会根源的知识。遗传变量可能在解释黑人和白人血压差异方面发挥一定作用,但社会因素比遗传因素更重要。我回顾了将压力、社会融合、应对方式和健康行为(包括肥胖)与高血压联系起来的证据,强调这些风险因素的分布是由更大的社会结构和过程塑造的。降低压力和改善健康行为的有效努力不能仅关注个人,而必须寻求改变产生疾病的社会、经济和政治结构及安排。