Gee Gilbert C, Spencer Michael S, Chen Juan, Takeuchi David
Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2007 Jul;97(7):1275-82. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2006.091827. Epub 2007 May 30.
We examined whether self-reported everyday discrimination was associated with chronic health conditions among a nationally representative sample of Asian Americans.
Data were from the Asian American subsample (n = 2095) of the National Latino and Asian American Study conducted in 2002 and 2003. Regression techniques (negative binomial and logistic) were used to examine the association between discrimination and chronic health conditions. Analyses were conducted for the entire sample and 3 Asian subgroups (Chinese, Vietnamese, and Filipino).
Reports of everyday discrimination were associated with many chronic conditions, after we controlled for age, gender, region, per capita income, education, employment, and social desirability bias. Discrimination was also associated with indicators of heart disease, pain, and respiratory illnesses. There were some differences by Asian subgroup.
Everyday discrimination may contribute to stress experienced by racial/ethnic minorities and could lead to chronic illness.
我们在一个具有全国代表性的亚裔美国人样本中,研究了自我报告的日常歧视与慢性健康状况之间是否存在关联。
数据来自2002年和2003年进行的全国拉丁裔和亚裔美国人研究中的亚裔美国人子样本(n = 2095)。采用回归技术(负二项式和逻辑回归)来研究歧视与慢性健康状况之间的关联。对整个样本以及3个亚裔亚组(华裔、越南裔和菲律宾裔)进行了分析。
在我们控制了年龄、性别、地区、人均收入、教育程度、就业情况和社会期望偏差之后,日常歧视的报告与许多慢性疾病有关。歧视还与心脏病、疼痛和呼吸系统疾病的指标有关。亚裔亚组之间存在一些差异。
日常歧视可能会导致少数种族/族裔群体感受到压力,并可能引发慢性病。