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种族歧视预测孕妇自评健康状况不佳和皮质醇水平:来自新西兰的见解。

Ethnic discrimination predicts poor self-rated health and cortisol in pregnancy: insights from New Zealand.

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO, USA.

Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2015 Mar;128:36-42. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.01.003. Epub 2015 Jan 6.

Abstract

Despite growing research emphasis on understanding the health effects of ethnic discrimination, little work has focused on how such exposures may influence a woman's biology and health during pregnancy. Understanding such effects is important given evidence that maternal stress experience in pregnancy can have long term effects on offspring health. Here we present data evaluating the relationship between perceived discrimination, self-rated health, and the stress hormone cortisol measured in late pregnancy among a diverse sample of women living in Auckland, New Zealand (N = 55). We also evaluated possible intergenerational impacts of maternal discrimination on stress reactivity in a subset of offspring (N = 19). Pregnant women were recruited from two antenatal care clinics in Auckland. Women were met in their homes between 34 and 36 weeks gestation, during which time a prenatal stress questionnaire was administered and saliva samples (morning and evening from two days) were obtained. Offspring cortisol reactivity was assessed at the standard six week postnatal vaccination visit. We found that 34% of women reported having experienced ethnic discrimination, with minority and immigrant women being more likely to report being angry or upset in response to discrimination experience compared with NZ-born women of European descent. Women reporting discrimination experience had worse self-rated health, higher evening cortisol and gave birth to infants with higher cortisol reactivity, all independent of ethnicity and material deprivation. These findings suggest that discrimination experience can have biological impacts in pregnancy and across generations, potentially contributing to the ethnic gradient in health.

摘要

尽管越来越多的研究强调了解种族歧视对健康的影响,但很少有研究关注这些暴露如何影响女性在怀孕期间的生物学和健康。鉴于怀孕期间母亲经历的压力可能对后代的健康产生长期影响,了解这些影响很重要。在这里,我们提供了在新西兰奥克兰居住的不同种族女性样本(N=55)中评估感知歧视、自我报告健康状况和妊娠晚期皮质醇应激激素之间关系的数据。我们还评估了母亲歧视对后代应激反应的可能代际影响,其中一部分后代(N=19)参与了评估。孕妇从奥克兰的两个产前保健诊所招募。在妊娠 34 至 36 周期间,孕妇在家中接受检查,在此期间进行了产前压力问卷评估,并采集了唾液样本(两天的早晨和晚上)。在标准的六周产后疫苗接种访问时评估了后代的皮质醇反应。我们发现,34%的女性报告经历过种族歧视,少数民族和移民女性比新西兰出生的欧洲裔女性更有可能因歧视经历而感到愤怒或不安。报告歧视经历的女性自我报告健康状况较差,傍晚皮质醇水平较高,分娩的婴儿皮质醇反应较高,所有这些都与种族和物质匮乏无关。这些发现表明,歧视经历可能会对怀孕和代际产生生物学影响,这可能是健康方面的种族差异的原因之一。

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