Center for Health Care Innovation, CSULB, Long Beach, CA 90815, USA.
Ethn Health. 2010 Apr;15(2):121-43. doi: 10.1080/13557850903490298.
Perceived discrimination is a psychosocial stressor that plays a role in explaining racial/ethnic disparities in self-reported physical and mental health. The purpose of this paper is: (1) to investigate the association between perceived discrimination in receiving healthcare and racial/ethnic disparities in self-rated health status, physical, and emotional functional limitations among a diverse sample of California adults; (2) to assess whether discrimination effects vary by racial/ethnic group and gender; and (3) to evaluate how the effects of discrimination on health are manifest across the socioeconomic position (SEP) spectrum.
Data were drawn from the 2001 California Health Interview Survey adult file (n=55,428). The analytic approach employed multivariate linear and logistic regressions. Discrimination is qualitatively identified into two types: (1) discrimination due to race/ethnicity, language, or accent, and (2) other discrimination.
Findings show that both types of discrimination negatively influenced self-rated health, and were associated with a two to three-fold odds of limitations in physical and emotional health. Further, these effects varied by racial/ethnic group and gender, and the effects were mixed. Most notably, for emotional health, racial/ethnic discrimination penalized Latinas more than non-Latina Whites, but for physical health, other discrimination was less detrimental to Latinas than it was to non-Latina Whites. At higher levels of SEP, the effects of racial/ethnic discrimination on self-rated health and other discriminations' effects on physical health were attenuated.
Higher SEP may serve as an important mitigator, particularly when comparing the medium to the low SEP categories. It is also possible that SEP effects cannot be extracted from the relationships of interest in that SEP is an expression of social discrimination. In fact, negative health effects associated with discrimination are evident across the SEP spectrum. This study highlights the complexity of the relationships between discrimination and racial/ethnic identity, gender, and SEP.
感知到的歧视是一种社会心理压力源,它在解释族裔差异与自我报告的身心健康之间起着作用。本文的目的是:(1)调查在接受医疗保健方面感知到的歧视与加利福尼亚州不同种族/族裔成年人的自评健康状况、身体和情感功能限制方面的种族/族裔差异之间的关系;(2)评估歧视效应是否因种族/族裔群体和性别而异;(3)评估歧视对健康的影响在社会经济地位(SEP)范围内的表现。
数据来自 2001 年加利福尼亚健康访谈调查成人档案(n=55428)。采用多元线性和逻辑回归分析方法。歧视被定性地分为两类:(1)因种族/族裔、语言或口音而产生的歧视,(2)其他歧视。
研究结果表明,这两种类型的歧视都对自评健康产生了负面影响,并与身体和情感健康方面的限制增加了两到三倍的几率相关。此外,这些影响因种族/族裔群体和性别而异,并且效果混杂。值得注意的是,对于情感健康,种族/族裔歧视对拉丁裔的惩罚程度大于非拉丁裔白人,而对于身体健康,其他歧视对拉丁裔的影响不如对非拉丁裔白人的影响大。在更高的 SEP 水平上,种族/族裔歧视对自评健康的影响以及其他歧视对身体健康的影响减弱。
较高的 SEP 可能是一个重要的缓解因素,尤其是在比较中等到低 SEP 类别时。也有可能是 SEP 效应不能从感兴趣的关系中提取出来,因为 SEP 是社会歧视的一种表现。事实上,与歧视相关的负面健康影响在 SEP 范围内显而易见。本研究强调了歧视与种族/族裔身份、性别和 SEP 之间关系的复杂性。