Goleen Samari is with Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health, the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco. Héctor E. Alcalá is with the Department of Family, Population and Preventative Medicine, Program in Public Health, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY. Mienah Zulfacar Sharif is with the Department of Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Am J Public Health. 2018 Jun;108(6):e1-e9. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2018.304402. Epub 2018 Apr 19.
In 2017, a "Muslim ban" on immigrants to the United States was coupled with a continued rise in Islamophobia and hate crimes toward Muslims. Islamophobia undermines health equity, yet delineating the effects of Islamophobia globally is challenging as it affects a myriad of groups (geographically, racially, and socially). Additionally, stereotypes equate all Muslims with populations from the Middle East and South Asia. To date, health research pays insufficient attention to Islamophobia, Muslims, and those racialized to be Muslim.
This literature review advances our understanding of racism and health by examining the racialization of religion, by specifically examining Islamophobia as a form of discrimination.
Per PRISMA guidelines, we conducted a search in October 2017 using PubMed-MEDLINE and a combination of terms. We identified additional articles using other search engines. For inclusion, articles needed to include a descriptor of discrimination, contain an identifier of Muslim or Muslim-like identity (i.e., groups commonly perceived as Muslim, including Arabs, Middle Easterners, North Africans, and South Asians), include a health outcome, be in English, and be published between 1990 and 2017.
We identified 111 unique peer-reviewed articles. We excluded articles that did not meet the following criteria: (1) examined Islamophobia, discrimination, or racism among a Muslim or Muslim-like population; (2) included a health outcome or discussion of health disparities; and (3) was conducted in North America, Europe, Australia, or New Zealand. This yielded 53 articles.
The majority of studies (n = 34; 64%) were quantitative. The remaining studies were qualitative (n = 7; 13%), mixed methods (n = 2; 4%), or reviews (n = 10; 19%). Most studies were based in the United States (n = 31; 58%). Nearly half of the reviewed studies examined mental health (n = 24; 45%), and one fourth examined physical health or health behaviors (n = 13; 25%). Others focused on both physical and mental health (n = 10; 19%) or health care seeking (n = 7; 13%). Studies showed associations between Islamophobia and poor mental health, suboptimal health behaviors, and unfavorable health care-seeking behaviors.
This study elucidates the associations between Islamophobia, health, and socioecological determinants of health. Future studies should examine the intersectional nature of Islamophobia and include validated measures, representative samples, subgroup analyses, and comparison groups. More methodologically rigorous studies of Islamophobia and health are needed. Public Health Implications. Addressing the discrimination-related poor health that Muslims and racialized Muslim-like subgroups experience is central to the goals of health equity and assurance of the fundamental right to health.
2017 年,美国对移民实施了“穆斯林禁令”,同时,对穆斯林的仇视和仇恨犯罪也在持续上升。对伊斯兰教的恐惧破坏了健康公平,但由于其影响到众多群体(地域、种族和社会),因此难以确定全球范围内对伊斯兰教的恐惧的影响。此外,刻板印象将所有穆斯林与来自中东和南亚的人群等同起来。迄今为止,健康研究对伊斯兰教恐惧症、穆斯林和被归为穆斯林的人群关注不足。
本文献综述通过考察宗教的种族化,特别是通过考察伊斯兰教恐惧症作为一种歧视形式,增进我们对种族主义和健康的理解。
根据 PRISMA 指南,我们于 2017 年 10 月在 PubMed-MEDLINE 上进行了搜索,并结合使用了一些术语。我们还使用其他搜索引擎找到了其他文章。为了纳入研究,文章需要包括歧视的描述,包含穆斯林或穆斯林似的身份标识(即通常被认为是穆斯林的群体,包括阿拉伯人、中东人、北非人和南亚人),包括健康结果,使用英语,并在 1990 年至 2017 年之间发表。
我们确定了 111 篇独特的同行评议文章。我们排除了不符合以下标准的文章:(1)研究了穆斯林或穆斯林似群体中的伊斯兰教恐惧症、歧视或种族主义;(2)包括健康结果或讨论健康差异;(3)在北美、欧洲、澳大利亚或新西兰进行。这产生了 53 篇文章。
大多数研究(n=34;64%)是定量的。其余研究是定性的(n=7;13%)、混合方法的(n=2;4%)或综述的(n=10;19%)。大多数研究是在美国进行的(n=31;58%)。近一半的综述研究考察了心理健康(n=24;45%),四分之一的研究考察了身体健康或健康行为(n=13;25%)。其他研究则侧重于身心健康(n=10;19%)或寻求医疗保健(n=7;13%)。研究表明,伊斯兰教恐惧症与心理健康不良、健康行为不佳和不利的医疗保健寻求行为之间存在关联。
本研究阐明了伊斯兰教恐惧症、健康以及健康的社会生态决定因素之间的关联。未来的研究应考察伊斯兰教恐惧症的交叉性质,并包括经过验证的测量方法、代表性样本、亚组分析和对照组。需要对伊斯兰教恐惧症和健康进行更多方法严谨的研究。公共卫生意义。解决穆斯林和被归为穆斯林的亚群体所经历的与歧视有关的不良健康问题,是实现健康公平和保障基本健康权的核心目标。