Cobb Ryon J, Erving Christy L, Byrd W Carson
University of Georgia.
Department of Sociology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Ethn Racial Stud. 2021;44(5):806-818. doi: 10.1080/01419870.2021.1867216. Epub 2021 Feb 3.
The present study used data from the American Trends Panel to examine the interplay between the perceived COVID-19 health threat, discriminatory beliefs in medical settings, and psychological distress among Black Americans. We measured psychological distress as an average of five items modified from two established scales and used self-reports of perceived COVID-19 health threat and beliefs about discrimination in medical settings as focal predictors. Ordinary least squares regression was used to examine these relationships. Holding all else constant, we found that perceived COVID-19 health threat and the belief that Black Americans face racial discrimination in medical settings were both positively and significantly associated with higher levels of psychological distress. We also found a significant perceived COVID-19 health threat by belief about discrimination in medical settings interaction in the full model. Future studies should assess how these relationships vary across age groups and over time.
本研究使用了美国趋势小组的数据,以检验美国黑人对新冠疫情健康威胁的认知、在医疗环境中的歧视性观念与心理困扰之间的相互作用。我们将心理困扰衡量为从两个既定量表修改而来的五个项目的平均值,并将对新冠疫情健康威胁的认知以及对医疗环境中歧视的看法的自我报告作为重点预测指标。使用普通最小二乘法回归来检验这些关系。在其他所有因素保持不变的情况下,我们发现,对新冠疫情健康威胁的认知以及认为美国黑人在医疗环境中面临种族歧视的观念,均与更高水平的心理困扰呈显著正相关。我们还在完整模型中发现了对新冠疫情健康威胁的认知与对医疗环境中歧视的看法之间存在显著的相互作用。未来的研究应评估这些关系在不同年龄组以及随时间推移如何变化。