Graduate School of Social Work, University of Denver, Denver, Colorado, USA.
Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Gerontologist. 2022 May 26;62(5):780-791. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnac043.
COVID-19 has disproportionately impacted older adults and Black individuals. Research has focused on physical outcomes, with less attention to the psychological effects of COVID-19. The objective of this study was to examine the interplay between perceptions of the COVID-19 outbreak as a threat to one's day-to-day life, race, and psychological distress among middle-aged and older men and women.
Analyses were conducted on a subsample of self-identified non-Latino Whites and Black individuals aged 50 and older (N = 3,834) from the American Trends Panel. Psychological distress was assessed with 5 items adapted from the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale and Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7. Perceived COVID-19 day-to-day threat was assessed with a single question. Negative binomial regressions tested the study aim.
Perceptions of COVID-19 day-to-day threat were positively associated with psychological distress. Black individuals reported lower distress than Whites. Regardless of gender, greater perceptions of COVID-19 day-to-day threats were associated with greater distress among both White respondents and Black respondents. However, this association was weaker among Black respondents than White respondents. Among men only, the association between COVID-19 day-to-day threat and distress varied by race, patterned similarly to the race differences identified in the total sample. This association did not vary by race among women.
This study contributes to the emerging literature focused on older adults and COVID-19 related stressors and psychological distress. An intersectional lens shows how structural oppression may shape perceptions of the pandemic. Future work should consider coexisting intersections in marginalized identities and mental health during COVID-19.
COVID-19 对老年人和黑人的影响不成比例。研究主要集中在身体结果上,对 COVID-19 的心理影响关注较少。本研究的目的是探讨中年人及老年人对 COVID-19 爆发对日常生活的威胁、种族和心理困扰的看法之间的相互作用。
分析了来自美国趋势小组的自我认定为非拉丁裔白人和黑人中年龄在 50 岁及以上的样本(N=3834)。心理困扰用来自中心流行病学研究抑郁量表和广泛性焦虑症-7 的 5 个项目评估。对 COVID-19 日常威胁的感知用一个问题评估。使用负二项回归检验研究目的。
对 COVID-19 日常威胁的感知与心理困扰呈正相关。黑人报告的困扰低于白人。无论性别如何,无论是白人还是黑人,对 COVID-19 日常威胁的感知越大,他们的困扰就越大。然而,这种关联在黑人受访者中比在白人受访者中较弱。仅在男性中,COVID-19 日常威胁和困扰之间的关联因种族而异,与总样本中确定的种族差异模式相似。这种关联在女性中不因种族而异。
本研究为关注老年人和与 COVID-19 相关压力源和心理困扰的新兴文献做出了贡献。交叉视角表明,结构性压迫如何影响对大流行的看法。未来的工作应考虑在 COVID-19 期间,边缘化身份和心理健康中同时存在的交叉点。