University of Missouri, Columbia.
Fam Community Health. 2023;46(3):203-208. doi: 10.1097/FCH.0000000000000354. Epub 2022 Nov 15.
Racially minoritized groups have disproportionately borne the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in America. We draw on Public Health Critical Race Praxis to investigate racial differences in college students' attitudes about mitigation efforts to limit the spread of COVID-19 and concerns about one's own and others' actions in these efforts. We used survey data from a random sample of Midwestern undergraduates (n = 620) who participated in a fall 2020 COVID-19 study; chi-square tests and logistic regression modeling were employed. Students of color were more likely than white students to report mitigation strategies as not sufficiently restrictive and that communities ought to prioritize limiting the spread of COVID-19. Students of color were also more likely to be concerned that the actions of others were spreading COVID-19. Universities need to continuously ask how their policies and practices acknowledge the broader racial context and seek the perspectives of diverse students.
少数族裔群体在美国不成比例地承受了 COVID-19 大流行的影响。我们借鉴公共卫生批判种族理论,调查了大学生对限制 COVID-19 传播的缓解措施的态度以及对自己和他人在这些措施中的行为的担忧方面的种族差异。我们使用了 2020 年秋季参与 COVID-19 研究的中西部本科生随机样本的调查数据(n = 620);采用了卡方检验和逻辑回归建模。有色人种学生比白人学生更有可能报告缓解策略不够严格,以及社区应该优先限制 COVID-19 的传播。有色人种学生也更有可能担心他人的行为正在传播 COVID-19。大学需要不断地询问他们的政策和实践如何承认更广泛的种族背景,并寻求不同学生的观点。