Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Ave North, Worcester, MA, 01605, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2019 Feb;6(1):117-132. doi: 10.1007/s40615-018-0507-9. Epub 2018 Jul 9.
Sociodemographic group-specific strategies for stress management may contribute to racial and gender disparities in health outcomes in the USA. We aimed to systematically review theoretical and empirical investigations of factors influencing variation in response to and management of identity-related stress among black and white Americans. OvidPsychInfo and PubMed databases were searched to identify eligible studies. Criteria were participant age of ≥ 18 years, conducted in the US sampling black or white participants, and published in English in a peer-reviewed journal. The final sample included 167 articles. Theories suggesting social status inequities as the primary contributor to disparate strategies employed by black and white women and men to manage social identity-related stress were most frequently tested and supported. Studies disproportionally focused on how women and black persons cope as targets of prejudice and discrimination rather than on how management strategies of men or white persons are affected as perpetrators. Finally, there was theoretical support for an interactive effect of race and gender on stress management, but empirical evidence was lacking, particularly among black men, white women, and white men. The literature could be strengthened through the use of prospective cohorts and nationally representative samples, as well as study designs accounting for potential within-race and within-gender variation in the effects of social identity-related stressors on coping. With greater consistency in methodology, future empirical studies may yield additional information regarding group differences in stress management pertinent to clarifying mechanisms for the health consequences of exposure to social inequity among black and white women and men.
社会人口统计学群体特定的压力管理策略可能有助于解释美国健康结果中的种族和性别差异。我们旨在系统地回顾影响美国黑人和白人对与身份相关的压力的反应和管理的因素的理论和实证研究。使用 OvidPsychInfo 和 PubMed 数据库搜索符合条件的研究。纳入标准为:参与者年龄≥18 岁,在美国进行,抽样黑人和白人参与者,以同行评审期刊的英文发表。最终样本包括 167 篇文章。最常测试和支持的理论是,社会地位不平等是导致黑人和白人女性和男性管理与社会身份相关的压力时采用不同策略的主要原因。研究过分关注女性和黑人作为偏见和歧视目标的应对方式,而不是关注男性或白人作为施害者的管理策略如何受到影响。最后,有理论支持种族和性别对压力管理的交互作用,但缺乏实证证据,特别是在黑人男性、白人女性和白人男性中。通过使用前瞻性队列和全国代表性样本,以及考虑到与社会身份相关的压力源对应对的影响在种族内和性别内的潜在变化的研究设计,可以加强文献。随着方法学的更大一致性,未来的实证研究可能会提供有关压力管理方面的群体差异的更多信息,这对于阐明黑人和白人女性和男性接触社会不平等对健康后果的机制很重要。