Nurs Res. 2021;70(5S Suppl 1):S31-S42. doi: 10.1097/NNR.0000000000000527.
Exposure to racism and associated adversities, such as poverty, is hypothesized to contribute to racial inequities in health via stress and immune pathways. Furthermore, the effects of adversity may be more salient during sensitive developmental periods. Our study examined racial differences in stress and immune biomarkers during adolescence and the effects of exposure to economic adversity at distinct developmental time periods and cumulatively in accounting for potential racial differences.
Secondary analysis of the Adolescent Health and Development in Context study was conducted. Data were derived from self-administered surveys; interviews; smartphone-based, geographic-explicit ecological momentary assessment; stress biomarkers (evening salivary cortisol over six nights and hair cortisol); and immune biomarkers (salivary shedding of Epstein-Barr virus [EBV] DNA among EBV-positive adolescents). Current socioeconomic status measures included annual household income and caregiver education. Caregivers also reported experiences of bankruptcy, difficulty paying bills, receipt of food stamps/Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program/electronic benefit transfer, and job loss when the child was of ages birth-5 years, 6-10 years, and 11 years or older. An affirmative response to any item was defined as exposure to economic adversity for that developmental time period (yes/no). A cumulative economic adversity measure was calculated as the sum of exposures across developmental periods (0 = never exposed to 3 = exposed across all time periods). Descriptive and multivariable regression analyses were conducted, accounting for covariates.
Black/African American adolescents had higher salivary cortisol concentration, higher hair cortisol concentration, and an increased odd of salivary shedding of EBV DNA compared to White adolescents. Racial differences were not attenuated by the current socioeconomic status or economic adversity (developmental period or cumulatively).
Our study provides evidence that stress and immune biomarkers differ by race as early as adolescence and may be one pathway through which racism and associated adversities contribute to racial health inequities. Further research on the contribution of multiple adversities beyond poverty to racial inequities in physiological stress and health is critical for informing effective prevention and intervention efforts.
种族主义和相关逆境(如贫困)的暴露被认为通过压力和免疫途径导致健康方面的种族不平等。此外,逆境的影响在敏感的发育阶段可能更为突出。我们的研究考察了青少年时期压力和免疫生物标志物的种族差异,以及在解释潜在种族差异时,在不同发育时期和累积暴露于经济逆境对这些差异的影响。
对“青少年健康与发展背景研究”进行了二次分析。数据来自于自我管理的调查、访谈、基于智能手机的、地理明确的生态瞬间评估、压力生物标志物(六晚的夜间唾液皮质醇和头发皮质醇)和免疫生物标志物(EBV 阳性青少年的唾液 EBV 病毒[EBV]DNA 脱落)。当前的社会经济地位衡量标准包括家庭年收入和照顾者的教育程度。照顾者还报告了孩子在出生至 5 岁、6-10 岁和 11 岁或以上时经历的破产、难以支付账单、获得食品券/补充营养援助计划/电子福利转移以及失业的情况。对任何一个项目的肯定回答都被定义为该发育时期暴露于经济逆境(是/否)。累积经济逆境衡量标准是根据各发育时期的暴露情况计算得出的(0=从未暴露,3=暴露于所有时期)。进行了描述性和多变量回归分析,并考虑了协变量。
与白人青少年相比,黑人和非裔美国青少年的唾液皮质醇浓度更高,头发皮质醇浓度更高,唾液 EBV DNA 脱落的几率也更高。种族差异并未因当前的社会经济地位或经济逆境(发育时期或累积)而减弱。
我们的研究提供了证据,表明早在青少年时期,压力和免疫生物标志物就存在种族差异,这可能是种族主义和相关逆境导致健康种族不平等的途径之一。进一步研究除贫困以外的多种逆境对生理压力和健康方面的种族不平等的贡献,对于为有效的预防和干预措施提供信息至关重要。