Coman Emil Nicolae, Wu Helen Zhao
Health Disparities Institute, University of Connecticut Health Center, Hartford, CT, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Connecticut Health Center, Hartford, CT, USA.
Healthcare (Basel). 2018 Feb 20;6(1):18. doi: 10.3390/healthcare6010018.
Exposure to adverse environmental and social conditions affects physical and mental health through complex mechanisms. Different racial/ethnic (R/E) groups may be more or less vulnerable to the same conditions, and the resilience mechanisms that can protect them likely operate differently in each population. We investigate how adverse neighborhood conditions (neighborhood disorder, NDis) differentially impact mental health (anxiety, Anx) in a sample of white and Black (African American) young women from Southeast Texas, USA. We illustrate a simple yet underutilized segmented regression model where linearity is relaxed to allow for a shift in the strength of the effect with the levels of the predictor. We compare how these effects change within R/E groups with the level of the predictor, but also how the "tipping points," where the effects change in strength, may differ by R/E. We find with classic linear regression that neighborhood disorder adversely affects Black women's anxiety, while in white women the effect seems negligible. Segmented regressions show that the Ndis → Anx effects in both groups of women appear to shift at similar levels, about one-fifth of a standard deviation below the mean of NDis, but the effect for Black women appears to start out as negative, then shifts in sign, i.e., to increase anxiety, while for white women, the opposite pattern emerges. Our findings can aid in devising better strategies for reducing health disparities that take into account different coping or resilience mechanisms operating differentially at distinct levels of adversity. We recommend that researchers investigate when adversity becomes exceedingly harmful and whether this happens differentially in distinct populations, so that intervention policies can be planned to reverse conditions that are more amenable to change, in effect pushing back the overall social risk factors below such tipping points.
暴露于不利的环境和社会条件会通过复杂的机制影响身心健康。不同种族/族裔群体可能对相同条件的易感性或多或少存在差异,而能够保护他们的恢复力机制在每个人口中的运作方式可能不同。我们调查了美国得克萨斯州东南部白人和黑人(非裔美国人)年轻女性样本中,不利的邻里条件(邻里混乱,NDis)如何对心理健康(焦虑,Anx)产生不同影响。我们展示了一个简单但未充分利用的分段回归模型,其中放宽了线性假设,以允许效应强度随预测变量水平发生变化。我们比较了这些效应在种族/族裔群体内部如何随预测变量水平变化,以及效应强度发生变化的“临界点”在不同种族/族裔群体中可能存在的差异。我们通过经典线性回归发现,邻里混乱对黑人女性的焦虑有不利影响,而对白人女性的影响似乎可以忽略不计。分段回归表明,两组女性中Ndis→Anx的效应似乎在相似水平上发生变化,大约在NDis均值以下五分之一标准差处,但黑人女性的效应最初似乎是负面的,然后符号发生变化,即导致焦虑增加,而白人女性则出现相反的模式。我们的研究结果有助于制定更好的策略来减少健康差距,同时考虑到在不同逆境水平下以不同方式运作的不同应对或恢复力机制。我们建议研究人员调查逆境何时变得极其有害,以及这种情况在不同人群中是否存在差异,以便规划干预政策来扭转更易于改变的状况,实际上将整体社会风险因素推回到此类临界点以下。