Leia Y. Saltzman, LMSW, PhD, is an Assistant Professor; Veronica Henry, MSW, is a Graduate Student; Tonya C. Hansel, PhD, LMSW, is an Associate Professor; and Patrick S. Bordnick, PhD, is Dean; all at the School of Social Work, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA. Amy E. Lesen, PhD, is an Associate Professor, Minority Health and Health Disparities Research Center, Biology Department, Dillard University, New Orleans, LA.
Health Secur. 2021 Jun;19(S1):S5-S13. doi: 10.1089/hs.2021.0017. Epub 2021 May 19.
Communities of color in the United States have been disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Studies exploring the mental health implications of these disparities have only just begun to emerge. The purpose of this study is to better understand mental health concerns and test whether social determinants of health and COVID-19-related experiences influence these concerns. In April 2020, we launched a community-based survey for adults across the United States. A total of 341 respondents completed the survey, which included questions about demographics, depression, social isolation, work environment, and preexisting mental health conditions. We generated matched controls by adding county data from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to our survey. Chi square, Pearson product-moment correlation, point biserial correlation, and logistic regression were estimated. Our analysis revealed that respondents who identified as Latinx, Latin@, or Hispanic were 10 times more likely to meet the threshold score for depression. Similarly, individuals with prior mental health conditions and those who expressed feelings of social isolation due to COVID-19 were 3 times more likely to meet the threshold score for depression. These results confirm our hypothesis that communities of color will likely experience disproportionate mental health impacts of COVID-19-specifically, the mental health sequela that emerge from exposure, cumulative burden, and social isolation. We discuss the implications for expanding access and quality of health and mental health services to address current inequities.
美国的有色人种社区受到 COVID-19 大流行的不成比例影响。探索这些差异对心理健康影响的研究才刚刚开始出现。本研究旨在更好地了解心理健康问题,并检验健康的社会决定因素和与 COVID-19 相关的经历是否会影响这些问题。2020 年 4 月,我们为美国各地的成年人推出了一项基于社区的调查。共有 341 名受访者完成了调查,其中包括有关人口统计学、抑郁、社会隔离、工作环境和先前心理健康状况的问题。我们通过将罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会的县数据添加到我们的调查中来生成匹配的对照组。我们估计了卡方检验、皮尔逊积矩相关、点二项式相关和逻辑回归。我们的分析表明,自认为是拉丁裔、拉丁裔或西班牙裔的受访者患抑郁症的可能性是其他人的 10 倍。同样,有先前心理健康状况的个人以及因 COVID-19 而感到社会隔离的个人患抑郁症的可能性是其他人的 3 倍。这些结果证实了我们的假设,即有色人种社区可能会经历与 COVID-19 相关的不成比例的心理健康影响-具体而言,是由于暴露、累积负担和社会隔离而产生的心理健康后果。我们讨论了扩大获得健康和心理健康服务的机会和质量以解决当前不平等问题的意义。