Love Mary F, Brooks Andrea Nicole, Cox Sonya D, Okpala Munachi, Cooksey Gail, Cohen Audrey Sarah, Sharrief Anjail Z
College of Nursing, University of Houston, Houston, TX, United States.
Department of Neurology, McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center Houston, Houston, TX, United States.
Front Neurol. 2022 Aug 10;13:885374. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2022.885374. eCollection 2022.
Stroke, a life-threatening stressor, often negatively impacts stroke-survivor (SS) quality of life (QoL). Annual age-adjusted incidence and death rates for stroke are significantly higher among Black Americans than among White Americans. Racism, a significant stressor, occurs at structural, cultural, and interpersonal levels and contributes to health disparities for Black SS. Resilience, a dynamic process of positive adaptation to significant stress, is impacted by factors or resources both internal and external to the individual. This study aims to examine the effects of experiences of racism and resilience on Black SS QoL during early stroke recovery. This article presents the study protocol.
This will be a prospective observational mixed-methods study. Black community-dwelling adults who are within 4 weeks of a stroke will be eligible for inclusion. Baseline measures will include the exposure variables of experiences of racism and resilience. Covariates measured at baseline include sociodemographic variables (age, sex, marital status, education, income, health insurance, employment status, number of people in household, residential address), clinical variables (date and type of stroke, inferred Modified Rankin Scale, anxiety and depression screening), and psychosocial variables (COVID-19 stress, perceived stress, mindfulness). The outcome variable (QoL) will be assessed 6-months post-stroke. Multiple-level linear regression models will be used to test the direct effects of experiences of racism, and the direct and indirect effects of resilience, on QoL. Qualitative data will be collected focus groups and analyzed for themes of racism, resilience, and QoL.
Racism can compound the stress exerted by stroke on Black SS. This study will occur during the COVID-19 pandemic and in the aftermath of calls for social justice for Black Americans. Experiences of racism will be measured with instruments for both "everyday" discrimination and vigilance. Sociodemographic variables will be operationalized to assess specific social determinants of health that intersect with structural racism. Because of the long-standing history of racism in the United States of America (USA), cultural influences and access to resources are central to the consideration of individual-level resilience in Black SS. Study results may inform the development of interventions to support Black SS QoL through enhanced resilience.
中风是一种危及生命的应激源,常常对中风幸存者(SS)的生活质量(QoL)产生负面影响。美国黑人的年龄调整后的中风年发病率和死亡率显著高于美国白人。种族主义是一种重要的应激源,在结构、文化和人际层面都有体现,并导致黑人中风幸存者出现健康差异。复原力是对重大压力进行积极适应的动态过程,受到个体内部和外部因素或资源的影响。本研究旨在探讨种族主义经历和复原力对黑人中风幸存者早期康复期间生活质量的影响。本文介绍了研究方案。
这将是一项前瞻性观察性混合方法研究。中风后4周内居住在社区的黑人成年人将符合纳入条件。基线测量将包括种族主义经历和复原力的暴露变量。基线时测量的协变量包括社会人口统计学变量(年龄、性别、婚姻状况、教育程度、收入、医疗保险、就业状况、家庭人口数量、居住地址)、临床变量(中风日期和类型、改良Rankin量表推断值以及焦虑和抑郁筛查)以及心理社会变量(新冠疫情应激、感知应激、正念)。中风后6个月将评估结果变量(生活质量)。将使用多级线性回归模型来检验种族主义经历的直接影响以及复原力的直接和间接影响对生活质量的作用。将通过焦点小组收集定性数据,并分析种族主义、复原力和生活质量的主题。
种族主义会使中风给黑人中风幸存者带来的压力更加复杂。本研究将在新冠疫情期间以及呼吁为美国黑人伸张社会正义之后进行。种族主义经历将通过“日常”歧视和警惕性的工具进行测量。社会人口统计学变量将用于评估与结构性种族主义相交织的特定健康社会决定因素。由于美利坚合众国(美国)存在长期的种族主义历史,文化影响和资源获取对于考虑黑人中风幸存者个体层面的复原力至关重要。研究结果可能为通过增强复原力来支持黑人中风幸存者生活质量的干预措施的制定提供信息。