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教育程度提高非西班牙裔女性而非西班牙裔美国女性进行乳房体格检查的几率:美国国家健康访谈调查。

Educational Attainment Better Increases the Chance of Breast Physical Exam for Non-Hispanic Than Hispanic American Women: National Health Interview Survey.

作者信息

Assari Shervin, Bazargan Mohsen

机构信息

Department of Family Medicine, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, USA.

Department of Family Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, USA.

出版信息

Hosp Pract Res. 2019 Fall;4(4):122-127. doi: 10.15171/HPR.2019.25.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) theory suggests that the health effect of educational attainment is considerably smaller for members of racial and ethnic minority groups than for Whites.

OBJECTIVE

The current study explored the racial and ethnic differences in the association between educational attainment and breast physical exam (BPE) among women in the U.S.

METHODS

The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS 2015) included 12 510 women who were Hispanic or non-Hispanic Black or White people. The independent variable was the level of educational attainment. The dependent variable was lifetime BPE. Age, region, marital status, and employment were the covariates. Race and ethnicity were the focal moderators. Logistic regressions were used for data analysis.

RESULTS

Overall, higher educational attainment was associated with higher odds of BPE, net of all confounders (odds ratio [OR] = 1.11, 95% CI = 1.09-1.13). Ethnicity showed a significant statistical interaction with educational attainment on BPE (OR = 0.96, 95% CI = 0.93-1.00), which was suggestive of a smaller effect of high education attainment on BPE for Hispanic than non-Hispanic women. The same interaction could not be found for the comparison of White and Black women (OR = 0.98, 95% CI =0.94-1.02).

CONCLUSION

In line with other domains, non-Hispanic White women show a larger amount of health gain from their educational attainment than Hispanic women. It is not ethnicity or class but ethnicity and class that shapes how people engage in pro-health behaviors. This result may help hospitals and healthcare systems to better reduce health disparities in their target populations.

摘要

背景

少数族裔回报递减(MDRs)理论表明,种族和少数族裔群体成员的教育程度对健康的影响远小于白人。

目的

本研究探讨了美国女性中教育程度与乳房体格检查(BPE)之间关联的种族和族裔差异。

方法

2015年国家健康访谈调查(NHIS)纳入了12510名西班牙裔、非西班牙裔黑人或白人女性。自变量为教育程度,因变量为终生乳房体格检查。年龄、地区、婚姻状况和就业为协变量。种族和族裔是主要调节变量。采用逻辑回归进行数据分析。

结果

总体而言,在排除所有混杂因素后,较高的教育程度与接受乳房体格检查的较高几率相关(优势比[OR]=1.11,95%置信区间[CI]=1.09-1.13)。族裔在乳房体格检查方面与教育程度存在显著的统计学交互作用(OR=0.96,95%CI=0.93-1.00),这表明对于西班牙裔女性而言,高等教育程度对乳房体格检查的影响小于非西班牙裔女性。在比较白人和黑人女性时未发现相同的交互作用(OR=0.98,95%CI=0.94-1.02)。

结论

与其他领域一致,非西班牙裔白人女性从其教育程度中获得的健康收益比西班牙裔女性更多。塑造人们参与促进健康行为方式的不是族裔或阶层,而是族裔和阶层。这一结果可能有助于医院和医疗保健系统更好地减少目标人群中的健康差距。

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