Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, MD.
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Ann Behav Med. 2019 Jun 4;53(7):608-620. doi: 10.1093/abm/kay069.
Interpersonal discrimination is linked to greater risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and this association varies by race/ethnicity.
To examine whether exposure to everyday discrimination prospectively predicts elevated blood pressure (BP), whether this association differs by race/ethnicity, and is mediated by adiposity indices.
Using data for 2,180 self-identified White, Black, Chinese, Japanese, and Hispanic participants from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation, we examined associations among exposure to (higher vs. lower) everyday discrimination at baseline and BP and hypertension (HTN; systolic blood pressure [SBP] ≥ 140 mmHg; diastolic blood pressure [DBP] ≥ 90 mmHg; or self-reported HTN medication use) risk over a 10 year period. Additionally, we used the bootstrap method to assess repeated, time-varying markers of central and overall adiposity (waist circumference and body mass index [BMI] (kg/m2), respectively) as potential mediators.
Exposure to everyday discrimination predicted increases in SBP and DBP over time, even after adjusting for known demographic, behavioral, or medical risk factors. However, greater waist circumference or BMI (examined separately) mediated these observations. Notably, there were no racial/ethnic differences in the observed association and HTN risk was not predicted.
The current findings suggest that everyday discrimination may contribute to elevated BP over time in U.S. women, in part, through increased adiposity. These findings demonstrate the complexity of the linkage of discrimination to CVD risk and raise the need to closely examine biobehavioral pathways that may serve as potential mediators.
人际歧视与心血管疾病(CVD)的风险增加有关,这种关联因种族/民族而异。
检验日常歧视的暴露是否会前瞻性地预测血压升高,这种关联是否因种族/民族而异,以及是否通过肥胖指数来介导。
使用来自全国妇女健康研究的 2180 名自认为是白人、黑人、中国、日本和西班牙裔的参与者的数据,我们检验了基线时暴露于(较高与较低)日常歧视与血压和高血压(SBP≥140mmHg;DBP≥90mmHg;或自我报告的高血压药物使用)风险之间的关联,随访时间为 10 年。此外,我们使用自举法评估了中心和整体肥胖的重复、时变标志物(腰围和体重指数(kg/m2)),分别作为潜在的中介。
即使在调整了已知的人口统计学、行为或医学危险因素后,日常歧视的暴露也预测了 SBP 和 DBP 的随时间增加。然而,更大的腰围或 BMI(分别检查)介导了这些观察结果。值得注意的是,在观察到的关联和高血压风险方面没有种族/民族差异。
目前的研究结果表明,日常歧视可能会导致美国女性的血压随时间升高,部分原因是肥胖。这些发现表明歧视与 CVD 风险之间的联系很复杂,并提出了需要仔细检查可能作为潜在中介的生物行为途径的必要性。