Department of Sociology and Program in Health Medicine and Society, Lehigh University, 31 Williams Drive #280, Bethlehem, PA, USA.
University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2021 Aug;8(4):953-972. doi: 10.1007/s40615-020-00852-1. Epub 2020 Aug 24.
Data from the Survey of the Health of Urban Residents (SHUR) identified connections between police brutality and medical mistrust, generating significant media, policy, and research attention. Amidst intersecting crises of COVID-19, racism, and police brutality, this report describes survey development and data collection procedures for the SHUR.
We conducted focus groups with Black men, Latinxs, and immigrants in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Findings were used to develop and refine measures of conditions salient to the health of urban residents across the country. Quota sampling was employed; oversampling people of color and persons whose usual source of care was not a doctor's office.
Non-Hispanic Whites made up just under two thirds of the sample (63.65%, n = 2793). Black/African American respondents accounted for 14.2% of the sample (n = 623), while 11.62% (n = 510) were Latinx. Only 43.46% of respondents reported a doctor's office as their usual source of care. Novel measures of population-specific stressors include a range of negative encounters with the police, frequency of these encounters, and respondents' assessments of whether the encounters were necessary. SHUR assessed the likelihood of calling the police if there is a problem, worries about incarceration, and cause-specific stressors such as race-related impression management.
SHUR (n = 4389) is a useful resource for researchers seeking to address the health implications of experiences not frequently measured by national health surveillance surveys. It includes respondents' zip codes, presenting the opportunity to connect these data with zip code-level health system, social and economic characteristics that shape health beyond individual factors.
城镇居民健康调查 (SHUR) 的数据表明警察暴力与医疗不信任之间存在关联,这引起了媒体、政策和研究领域的广泛关注。在新冠疫情、种族主义和警察暴力等危机相互交织的背景下,本报告描述了 SHUR 的调查开发和数据收集程序。
我们在宾夕法尼亚州阿伦敦市与黑人、拉丁裔和移民进行了焦点小组讨论。研究结果被用于开发和完善对全国城市居民健康有重要意义的条件衡量标准。我们采用了配额抽样,对有色人种和通常不是医生办公室的人进行了超额抽样。
非西班牙裔白人占样本的近三分之二(63.65%,n=2793)。黑人/非裔美国人占样本的 14.2%(n=623),而拉丁裔占 11.62%(n=510)。只有 43.46%的受访者报告医生办公室是他们通常的医疗来源。针对特定人群的压力源的新措施包括一系列与警察的负面遭遇、遭遇的频率以及受访者对这些遭遇是否必要的评估。SHUR 评估了如果出现问题,人们打电话报警的可能性、对监禁的担忧以及与种族相关的印象管理等特定原因的压力。
SHUR(n=4389)是研究人员的有用资源,他们希望解决国家健康监测调查中不常测量的经历对健康的影响。它包括了受访者的邮政编码,为将这些数据与塑造健康的邮政编码层面的医疗系统、社会和经济特征联系起来提供了机会,这些特征超越了个人因素对健康的影响。