Nuru-Jeter Amani, Dominguez Tyan Parker, Hammond Wizdom Powell, Leu Janxin, Skaff Marilyn, Egerter Susan, Jones Camara P, Braveman Paula
Divisions of Community Health and Human Development; and Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California, 50 University Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-7360, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2009 Jan;13(1):29-39. doi: 10.1007/s10995-008-0357-x. Epub 2008 May 8.
Stress due to experiences of racism could contribute to African-American women's adverse birth outcomes, but systematic efforts to measure relevant experiences among childbearing women have been limited. We explored the racism experiences of childbearing African-American women to inform subsequent development of improved measures for birth outcomes research.
Six focus groups were conducted with a total of 40 socioeconomically diverse African-American women of childbearing age in four northern California cities.
Women reported experiencing racism (1) throughout the lifecourse, with childhood experiences seeming particularly salient and to have especially enduring effects (2) directly and vicariously, particularly in relation to their children; (3) in interpersonal, institutional, and internalized forms; (4) across different life domains; (5) with active and passive responses; and (6) with pervasive vigilance, anticipating threats to themselves and their children.
This exploratory study's findings support the need for measures reflecting the complexity of childbearing African-American women's racism experiences. In addition to discrete, interpersonal experiences across multiple domains and active/passive responses, which have been measured, birth outcomes research should also measure women's childhood experiences and their potentially enduring impact, perceptions of institutionalized racism and internalized negative stereotypes, vicarious experiences related to their children, vigilance in anticipating future racism events, as well as the pervasiveness and chronicity of racism exposure, all of which could be sources of ongoing stress with potentially serious implications for birth outcomes. Measures of racism addressing these issues should be developed and formally tested.
种族主义经历所带来的压力可能会导致非裔美国女性不良的生育结果,但系统地衡量育龄女性相关经历的努力一直有限。我们探究了育龄非裔美国女性的种族主义经历,以为后续改进生育结果研究的测量方法提供依据。
在加利福尼亚州北部的四个城市,对40名社会经济背景各异的育龄非裔美国女性进行了6次焦点小组访谈。
女性报告称在整个生命历程中都经历过种族主义(1),童年经历似乎尤为突出且具有特别持久的影响(2),包括直接和间接经历,尤其是与她们的孩子相关的经历;(3)以人际、制度和内化的形式存在;(4)贯穿不同生活领域;(5)有主动和被动的反应;(6)时刻保持警惕,预见到对自己和孩子的威胁。
这项探索性研究的结果支持了制定反映育龄非裔美国女性种族主义经历复杂性的测量方法的必要性。除了已测量的跨多个领域的离散人际经历以及主动/被动反应外,生育结果研究还应测量女性的童年经历及其潜在的持久影响、对制度化种族主义和内化负面刻板印象的认知、与孩子相关的间接经历、对未来种族主义事件的警惕性,以及种族主义暴露的普遍性和长期性,所有这些都可能是持续压力的来源,对生育结果可能产生严重影响。应开发并正式测试解决这些问题的种族主义测量方法。