Demography and Ageing Unit, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Social Gerontology, National Ageing Research Institute (NARI), Parkville, Australia.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2021 Jun;56(6):1003-1014. doi: 10.1007/s00127-020-01914-9. Epub 2020 Jul 21.
Australian policy-making needs better information on the prevalence, context and types of discrimination reported by people living with mental health conditions and the association of exposure to discrimination with experiencing a barrier to accessing healthcare.
Secondary data analysis using the national representative General Social Survey 2014 to examine discrimination and healthcare barriers. Multivariable logistic regression was used to examine the association between discrimination and barriers to healthcare.
Around 10% of older adults without mental health conditions reported an instance of discrimination in the last 12 months, compared to 22-25% of those with mental health conditions. Approximately 20% with mental health conditions attributed discrimination to their health conditions, along with other characteristics including age. Discrimination was reported in settings important to human capital (e.g., healthcare, workplace), but also in general social and public contexts. Everyday discrimination (OR = 2.11 p < 0.001), discrimination in healthcare (OR = 2.92 p < 0.001), and discrimination attributed to the person's health condition (OR = 1.99 p < 0.05) increased the odds of experiencing a barrier to care two-to-three-fold. For each type of discrimination reported (e.g., racism, ageism etc.), the odds of experiencing a barrier to care increased 1.3 times (OR = 1.29 p < 0.01).
This new population-level evidence shows older adults with mental health conditions are experiencing discrimination at more than twofold compared to those without mental health conditions. Discrimination was associated with preventing or delaying healthcare access. These findings indicate that future strategies to promote mental healthcare in underserved groups of older people will need to be multidimensional and consideration given to address discrimination.
澳大利亚的政策制定需要更好地了解患有精神健康状况人群所报告的歧视的普遍性、背景和类型,以及接触歧视与遇到获取医疗保健障碍之间的关联。
使用具有代表性的全国性综合社会调查 2014 年的数据进行二次数据分析,以调查歧视和医疗保健障碍。使用多变量逻辑回归来检验歧视与医疗保健障碍之间的关联。
在过去 12 个月中,约有 10%没有精神健康状况的老年人报告了一次歧视事件,而有精神健康状况的人则有 22-25%报告了歧视事件。大约 20%的有精神健康状况的人将歧视归因于他们的健康状况,以及包括年龄在内的其他特征。歧视发生在对人力资本很重要的环境中(例如医疗保健、工作场所),但也发生在一般的社会和公共环境中。日常歧视(OR=2.11,p<0.001)、医疗保健中的歧视(OR=2.92,p<0.001)以及归因于个人健康状况的歧视(OR=1.99,p<0.05)使获得护理的障碍的可能性增加了两到三倍。对于报告的每一种歧视类型(例如种族主义、年龄歧视等),获得护理的障碍的可能性增加了 1.3 倍(OR=1.29,p<0.01)。
这项新的人群水平证据表明,患有精神健康状况的老年人所经历的歧视是没有精神健康状况的人的两倍以上。歧视与预防或延迟获得医疗保健有关。这些发现表明,未来在服务不足的老年人群体中促进精神保健的战略将需要是多方面的,并考虑解决歧视问题。