Department of Sociology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Sociology and Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Biodemography Soc Biol. 2020 Jan-Mar;66(1):1-26. doi: 10.1080/19485565.2020.1793659.
This study examines patterns of and explanations for racial/ethnic-education disparities in infant mortality in the United States. Using linked birth and death data (2007-2010), we find that while education-specific infant mortality rates are similar for Mexican Americans and Whites, infants of college-educated African American women experience 3.1 more deaths per 1,000 live births (Rate Ratio = 1.46) than infants of White women with a high school degree or less. The high mortality rates among infants born to African American women of all educational attainment levels are fully accounted for by shorter gestational lengths. Supplementary analyses of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health show that college-educated African American women exhibit similar socioeconomic, contextual, psychosocial, and health disadvantages as White women with a high school degree or less. Together, these results demonstrate African American-White infant mortality and socioeconomic, health, and contextual disparities within education levels, suggesting the role of life course socioeconomic disadvantage and stress processes in the poorer infant health outcomes of African Americans relative to Whites.
本研究考察了美国婴儿死亡率中种族/民族教育差异的模式和原因。利用链接的出生和死亡数据(2007-2010 年),我们发现,虽然墨西哥裔美国人和白人的特定教育程度的婴儿死亡率相似,但受过大学教育的非裔美国妇女的婴儿死亡率比高中或以下学历的白人妇女高出每 1000 例活产 3.1 例(比率比为 1.46)。所有教育程度的非裔美国妇女所生婴儿的高死亡率完全归因于妊娠时间缩短。对来自青少年至成人健康全国纵向研究的数据的补充分析表明,受过大学教育的非裔美国妇女表现出与高中或以下学历的白人妇女相似的社会经济、环境、心理社会和健康劣势。这些结果共同表明,在教育水平内存在非裔美国人和白人婴儿死亡率以及社会经济、健康和环境差异,表明生命历程中的社会经济劣势和压力过程在非裔美国人相对白人的较差婴儿健康结果中的作用。