Division of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2013 May;103(5):861-7. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2012.301184. Epub 2013 Mar 14.
We examined differences in self-reported mental health (SRMH) between US-born and Somalia-born Black Americans compared with White Americans. We tested how SRMH was affected by stigma toward seeing a mental health provider, discrimination in the health care setting, or symptoms of depression.
Data were from a 2008 survey of adults in Minnesota and were limited to US-born and Somalia-born Black and White Americans (n = 938).
Somalia-born adults were more likely to report better SRMH than either US-born Black or White Americans. They also reported lower levels of discrimination (18.6%) than US-born Black Americans (33.4%), higher levels of stigma (23.6% vs 4.7%), and lower levels of depressive symptoms (9.1% vs 31.6%). Controlling for stigma, discrimination, and symptomatology, Somalia-born Black Americans reported better SRMH than White and Black Americans (odds ratio = 4.76).
Mental health programming and health care providers who focus on Black Americans' mental health might be missing important sources of heterogeneity. It is essential to consider the role of race and ethnicity, but also of nativity, in mental health policy and programming.
我们比较了美国出生的和索马里出生的非裔美国黑人与美国白人在自我报告的心理健康(SRMH)方面的差异。我们检验了对看心理健康提供者的污名、医疗保健环境中的歧视或抑郁症状如何影响 SRMH。
数据来自 2008 年明尼苏达州成年人的调查,仅限于美国出生和索马里出生的黑人和白种美国人(n=938)。
与美国出生的黑人和白人美国人相比,索马里出生的成年人更有可能报告更好的 SRMH。他们报告的歧视程度也较低(18.6%),污名程度较高(23.6%比 4.7%),抑郁症状程度较低(9.1%比 31.6%)。在控制污名、歧视和症状后,索马里出生的非裔美国黑人比白人和黑种美国人报告的 SRMH 更好(优势比=4.76)。
专注于非裔美国人心理健康的心理健康计划和医疗保健提供者可能会错过重要的异质性来源。在心理健康政策和计划中,考虑种族和民族的作用至关重要,但也要考虑出生地的作用。