Lee Min-Ah
The Institute for Social Development and Policy Research, Seoul National University, Korea.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Jun;68(11):1975-84. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.02.040. Epub 2009 Apr 7.
Compared with the relationship between neighborhood-level residential segregation and physical health of Hispanic Americans, less is known about how neighborhood residential segregation affects mental health. This study examines if, and how, neighborhood residential segregation is associated with the mental health of Puerto Rican and Mexican Americans in Chicago. Multilevel analyses reveal that neighborhood residential segregation is positively associated with depressive symptoms and anxiety in both groups. Neighborhood segregation, however, has more salient effects on the mental health of Mexican Americans. For Puerto Rican Americans, the effects of neighborhood segregation on mental health become nonsignificant after controlling for neighborhood-level income and individual-level covariates, whereas neighborhood segregation is strongly associated with the mental health of Mexican Americans even after controlling for other covariates. These findings show that living in a Mexican American-dominated community is not beneficial to mental health, in contrast to findings for physical health shown in previous studies.
与邻里层面的居住隔离与西班牙裔美国人身体健康之间的关系相比,人们对邻里居住隔离如何影响心理健康知之甚少。本研究探讨了邻里居住隔离是否以及如何与芝加哥的波多黎各裔和墨西哥裔美国人的心理健康相关联。多层次分析表明,邻里居住隔离与两组人的抑郁症状和焦虑呈正相关。然而,邻里隔离对墨西哥裔美国人的心理健康影响更为显著。对于波多黎各裔美国人来说,在控制了邻里层面的收入和个体层面的协变量后,邻里隔离对心理健康的影响变得不显著,而即使在控制了其他协变量后,邻里隔离仍与墨西哥裔美国人的心理健康密切相关。这些发现表明,与先前研究中显示的身体健康结果相反,生活在以墨西哥裔美国人为主的社区对心理健康并无益处。