Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United States of America.
National Development and Research Institutes Inc, New York, NY, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Oct 9;14(10):e0223579. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223579. eCollection 2019.
Prior research has found that places and people that are more economically disadvantaged have higher rates and risks, respectively, of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Economic disadvantages at the level of places and people, however, are themselves influenced by economic policies. To enhance the policy relevance of STI research, we explore, for the first time, the relationship between state-level minimum wage policies and STI rates among women in a cohort of 66 large metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) in the US spanning 2003-2015. Our annual state-level minimum wage measure was adjusted for inflation and cost of living. STI outcomes (rates of primary and secondary syphilis, gonorrhea and chlamydia per 100,000 women) were obtained from the CDC. We used multivariable hierarchical linear models to test the hypothesis that higher minimum wages would be associated with lower STI rates. We preliminarily explored possible socioeconomic mediators of the minimum wage/STI relationship (e.g., MSA-level rates of poverty, employment, and incarceration). We found that a $1 increase in the price-adjusted minimum wage over time was associated with a 19.7% decrease in syphilis rates among women and with an 8.5% drop in gonorrhea rates among women. The association between minimum wage and chlamydia rates did not meet our cutpoint for substantive significance. Preliminary mediation analyses suggest that MSA-level employment among women may mediate the relationship between minimum wage and gonorrhea. Consistent with an emerging body of research on minimum wage and health, our findings suggest that increasing the minimum wage may have a protective effect on STI rates among women. If other studies support this finding, public health strategies to reduce STIs among women should include advocating for a higher minimum wage.
先前的研究发现,在经济上处于劣势的地方和人群,分别有更高的性传播感染(STIs)发病率和风险。然而,地方和人群的经济劣势本身也受到经济政策的影响。为了提高 STI 研究的政策相关性,我们首次探索了美国 66 个大都市区(MSAs)队列中女性的州级最低工资政策与 STI 率之间的关系,研究时间跨度为 2003-2015 年。我们的年度州级最低工资衡量标准经过了通胀和生活成本的调整。STI 结果(每 10 万名女性中原发性和继发性梅毒、淋病和衣原体的发病率)来自疾病预防控制中心。我们使用多变量分层线性模型来检验以下假设:更高的最低工资与更低的 STI 率相关。我们初步探讨了最低工资/STI 关系的可能社会经济中介因素(例如,MSA 层面的贫困、就业和监禁率)。我们发现,随着时间的推移,价格调整后的最低工资每增加 1 美元,女性梅毒发病率就会降低 19.7%,淋病发病率降低 8.5%。最低工资与衣原体发病率之间的关联没有达到我们设定的实质性显著水平。初步的中介分析表明,女性所在 MSA 的就业水平可能在最低工资和淋病之间起到中介作用。与最低工资与健康方面的新兴研究成果一致,我们的研究结果表明,提高最低工资可能对女性的 STI 率有保护作用。如果其他研究支持这一发现,那么减少女性 STI 的公共卫生策略应该包括倡导提高最低工资。