Assari Shervin, Bazargan Mohsen
Departments of Family Medicine, College of Medicine, Charles R Drew University of Medicine and Science, CA, United States.
Departments of Family Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Los Angeles, CA, United States.
J Family Reprod Health. 2019 Sep;13(3):132-140.
The positive effect of high socioeconomic position (SEP) on health is well established. According Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) theory, however, the SEP-health link is smaller for Blacks compared to Whites. Using a 25-year follow up data of a national sample, this study tested racial differences in the effects of marital status on life expectancy among American adults. The data of Americans' Changing Lives (ACL, 1986 - 2011) were used. The ACL is a nationally representative longitudinal cohort study followed 3,361 White or Blacks adults from 1986 to 2011. The predictor of interest was marital status in 1986. Confounders included demographic factors (age and gender), SEP (education and employment), health behaviors (drinking, smoking, and physical activity), and health status (depressive symptoms, chronic disease, and self-rated health) all measured at baseline. Race was the moderator variable. All-cause mortality was the main dependent variable (outcome). Cox proportional hazard modeling was applied for data analysis. In the overall sample, individuals who were married at baseline had a lower risk of mortality during the 25 years of follow up. Race altered the effect of marital status on life expectancy, indicating smaller protective effect for Blacks relative to Whites. Race -specific Cox regression models showed an association between marital status and life expectancy for White but not Black Americans. In line with the MDRs theory, the health gain that follows marital status is diminished for Black Americans compared to White Americans. Only equalizing SEP across racial groups may not be adequate for eliminating racial/ethnic health inequalities. Policies should go beyond SEP and reduce societal and structural barriers that disproportionately hinder Blacks from translating their SEP indicators to desirable health outcomes.
社会经济地位较高(SEP)对健康的积极影响已得到充分证实。然而,根据少数群体收益递减(MDRs)理论,与白人相比,黑人的SEP与健康之间的联系较小。本研究使用全国样本的25年随访数据,检验了婚姻状况对美国成年人预期寿命影响的种族差异。使用了“美国人生活变化”(ACL,1986 - 2011年)的数据。ACL是一项具有全国代表性的纵向队列研究,从1986年到2011年跟踪了3361名白人或黑人成年人。感兴趣的预测因素是1986年的婚姻状况。混杂因素包括人口统计学因素(年龄和性别)、SEP(教育程度和就业情况)、健康行为(饮酒、吸烟和体育活动)以及健康状况(抑郁症状、慢性病和自评健康),所有这些均在基线时进行测量。种族是调节变量。全因死亡率是主要的因变量(结果)。数据分析采用Cox比例风险模型。在总体样本中,基线时已婚的个体在25年随访期间的死亡风险较低。种族改变了婚姻状况对预期寿命的影响,表明黑人相对于白人的保护作用较小。种族特异性Cox回归模型显示,婚姻状况与美国白人的预期寿命之间存在关联,但与美国黑人无关。与MDRs理论一致,与美国白人相比,美国黑人因婚姻状况而获得的健康收益有所减少。仅在不同种族群体之间均衡SEP可能不足以消除种族/族裔健康不平等。政策应超越SEP,减少那些不成比例地阻碍黑人将其SEP指标转化为理想健康结果的社会和结构障碍。