The Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law, Los Angeles, California, USA.
The Fenway Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2018 Nov;72(11):1016-1026. doi: 10.1136/jech-2017-209860. Epub 2018 Sep 6.
Socioeconomic status (SES) is a fundamental contributor to health; however, limited research has examined sexual orientation differences in SES.
2008-2009 data from 14 051 participants (ages 24-32 years) in the US-based, representative, National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health were analysed using multivariable regressions that adjusted for age, race-ethnicity, childhood SES, urbanicity and Census region, separately for females and males. Modification by racial minority status (black or Latino vs white, non-Hispanic) was also explored.
Among females, sexual minorities (SM) (10.5% of females) were less likely to graduate college, and were more likely to be unemployed, poor/near poor, to receive public assistance and to report economic hardship and lower social status than heterosexuals. Adjusting for education attenuated many of these differences. Among males, SM (4.2% of males) were more likely than heterosexuals to be college graduates; however, they also had lower personal incomes. Lower rates of homeownership were observed among SM, particularly racial minority SM females. For males, household poverty patterns differed by race-ethnicity: among racial minority males, SM were more likely than heterosexuals to be living at >400% federal poverty level), whereas the pattern was reversed among whites.
Sexual minorities, especially females, are of lower SES than their heterosexual counterparts. SES should be considered a potential mediator of SM stigma on health. Studies of public policies that may produce, as well as mitigate, observed SES inequities, are warranted.
社会经济地位(SES)是健康的一个基本决定因素;然而,关于性取向差异对 SES 的影响的研究还很有限。
对美国全国青少年健康纵向研究中 14051 名(年龄 24-32 岁)参与者 2008-2009 年的数据进行了分析,使用多元回归模型,分别对女性和男性进行调整,调整因素包括年龄、种族-族裔、儿童时期 SES、城市性和人口普查区域,还探讨了种族少数群体地位(黑人和拉丁裔与白人、非西班牙裔)的修饰作用。
在女性中,性少数群体(SM)(占女性的 10.5%)不太可能大学毕业,更有可能失业、贫困/接近贫困、接受公共援助、报告经济困难和社会地位较低,与异性恋者相比。调整教育因素后,许多差异都有所减弱。在男性中,SM(占男性的 4.2%)比异性恋者更有可能大学毕业;然而,他们的个人收入也较低。SM 的住房拥有率较低,尤其是少数族裔女性 SM。对于男性,家庭贫困模式因种族-族裔而异:在少数族裔男性中,SM 比异性恋者更有可能生活在>400%联邦贫困线),而在白人中则相反。
性少数群体,尤其是女性,其社会经济地位低于异性恋者。SES 应被视为 SM 耻辱对健康的潜在中介因素。有必要研究可能产生和减轻观察到的 SES 不平等的公共政策。