Kwate Naa Oyo A, Goodman Melody S
Departments of Human Ecology and Africana Studies, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 55 Dudley Rd, Cook Office Building, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8520, USA.
Division of Public Health Sciences Department of Surgery, Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8100, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Sep;116:150-60. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.05.041. Epub 2014 Jun 13.
Accumulated evidence has demonstrated that social position matters for health. Those with greater socioeconomic resources and greater perceived standing in the social hierarchy have better health than those with fewer resources and lower perceived standing. Race is another salient axis by which health is stratified in the U.S., but few studies have examined the benefit of White privilege. In this paper, we investigated how perceptions of inequality and subjective and objective social status affected the health and well-being of N = 630 White residents in three Boston neighborhoods lying on a social gradient differentiated by race, ethnicity, income and prestige. Outcomes were self-rated health, dental health, and happiness. Results suggested that: neighborhood residence was not associated with health after controlling for individual level factors (e.g., positive ratings of the neighborhood, education level); objective measures of socioeconomic status were associated with better self-reported and dental health, but subjective assessments of social position were more strongly associated; and White residents living in the two wealthiest neighborhoods, and who perceived Black families as welcome in their neighborhoods enjoyed better health than those who believed them to be less welcome. However, those who lived in the least wealthy and most diverse neighborhood fared worse when reporting Black families to be welcome. These results suggest that White privilege and relative social position interact to shape health outcomes.
越来越多的证据表明,社会地位对健康至关重要。那些拥有更多社会经济资源且在社会等级制度中享有更高地位的人,比那些资源较少且地位较低的人拥有更好的健康状况。种族是美国健康状况分层的另一个显著维度,但很少有研究探讨白人特权的益处。在本文中,我们调查了不平等观念以及主观和客观社会地位如何影响波士顿三个社区中N = 630名白人居民的健康和幸福感,这三个社区位于一个由种族、民族、收入和声望区分的社会梯度上。结果指标包括自评健康、牙齿健康和幸福感。结果表明:在控制个体层面因素(如对社区的积极评价、教育水平)后,社区居住情况与健康状况无关;社会经济地位的客观指标与更好的自评健康和牙齿健康相关,但社会地位的主观评估与之关联更强;居住在两个最富裕社区且认为黑人家庭在其社区受欢迎的白人居民,比那些认为黑人家庭不太受欢迎的居民健康状况更好。然而,那些居住在最不富裕且最多元化社区的人,在报告黑人家庭受欢迎时健康状况更差。这些结果表明,白人特权和相对社会地位相互作用,共同塑造健康结果。