Arévalo Sandra P, Tucker Katherine L, Falcón Luis M
College of Health Sciences, Clinical Laboratory and Nutritional Sciences, University of Massachusetts at Lowell, 3 Solomont Way, Suite 4, Weed Hall, Lowell, MA 01854, USA.
College of Health Sciences, Clinical Laboratory and Nutritional Sciences, University of Massachusetts at Lowell, 3 Solomont Way, Suite 4, Weed Hall, Lowell, MA 01854, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Nov;120:301-10. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.09.040. Epub 2014 Sep 22.
Our aim was to examine the effects of trajectories of stressful life events on allostatic load, measured over a two year time period, and to investigate the roles of language acculturation and age at migration in this association, in a sample of Puerto Rican migrants. We used data from the Boston Puerto Rican Health Study; a population-based prospective cohort of older Puerto Ricans recruited between the ages of 45 and 75 years. The Institutional Review Boards at Tufts Medical Center and Northeastern University approved the study. We used latent growth mixture modeling (LGMM) to identify different classes of two-year trajectories of stressful life events; analysis of variance to examine group differences by stress trajectory; and linear regression to test for the modifying effects of age at arrival on the association of stress trajectory with allostatic load at follow-up. In LGMM analysis, we identified three distinct stress trajectories; low, moderate ascending, and high. Unexpectedly, participants in the low stress group had the highest allostatic load at follow-up (F=4.4, p=0.01) relative to the other two groups. Age at arrival had a statistically significant moderating effect on the association. A reported two year period of moderate but repetitive and increasingly bad life events was associated with increases in allostatic load for participants who arrived to the U.S. mainland after the age of 5 years, and was particularly strong for those arriving between 6 and 11 years, but not for those arriving earlier or later. Results from this study highlight the complex effects of stress during the life course, and point to certain vulnerable periods for immigrant children that could modify long term effects of stress.
我们的目标是在一个波多黎各移民样本中,研究应激性生活事件轨迹对在两年时间内测量的负荷应激的影响,并调查语言文化适应和移民年龄在这种关联中的作用。我们使用了来自波士顿波多黎各健康研究的数据;这是一个基于人群的前瞻性队列,招募了年龄在45至75岁之间的老年波多黎各人。塔夫茨医学中心和东北大学的机构审查委员会批准了该研究。我们使用潜在增长混合模型(LGMM)来识别应激性生活事件的不同类别两年轨迹;使用方差分析来检查应激轨迹的组间差异;并使用线性回归来测试到达年龄对随访时应激轨迹与负荷应激关联的调节作用。在LGMM分析中,我们识别出三种不同的应激轨迹:低、中度上升和高。出乎意料的是,与其他两组相比,低应激组的参与者在随访时的负荷应激最高(F = 4.4,p = 0.01)。到达年龄对这种关联有统计学上显著的调节作用。据报告,对于5岁以后抵达美国大陆的参与者,为期两年的中度但重复且日益糟糕的生活事件与负荷应激增加有关,对于6至11岁抵达的参与者尤为强烈,但对于更早或更晚抵达的参与者则不然。这项研究的结果突出了生命过程中应激的复杂影响,并指出了移民儿童可能改变应激长期影响的某些脆弱时期。