Department of Sociology and Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 155 Pauli Murray Hall CB #3210, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Department of Sociology, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Feb;11(1):137-149. doi: 10.1007/s40615-022-01505-1. Epub 2023 Jan 4.
Wide inequities in stress and health have been documented between Black and White women and men in the United States. This study asks: How does religion factor into these inequities? We approach this open question from a biopsychosocial perspective, developing three hypotheses for the stress-coping effects of religiosity between groups. We then test our hypotheses with survey and biomarker data from the Nashville Stress and Health Study (2011-2014), a probability sample of Black and White women and men from Davidson County, Tennessee. We find that Black women score the highest on all indicators of religiosity, followed by Black men, White women, and White men. We also find that increased divine control and religious coping predict higher levels of resiliency biomarkers for Black women only and lower levels for White respondents, especially White men. We discuss how our findings inform broader population health inequities and outline several avenues for future research.
在美国,黑人和白人女性和男性之间的压力和健康存在广泛的不平等。本研究提出:宗教在这些不平等中扮演了什么角色?我们从生物心理社会的角度来探讨这个开放性问题,针对群体间宗教信仰的压力应对效果提出了三个假设。然后,我们利用田纳西州戴维森县的纳什维尔压力与健康研究(2011-2014 年)的调查和生物标志物数据来检验我们的假设,该研究是黑人和白人女性和男性的概率样本。我们发现,黑人女性在所有宗教信仰指标上的得分最高,其次是黑人男性、白人女性和白人男性。我们还发现,增加神圣控制和宗教应对方式仅能预测黑人女性的更高水平的恢复力生物标志物,而对白人受访者,特别是白人男性,则会产生更低的水平。我们讨论了我们的发现如何为更广泛的人口健康不平等提供信息,并概述了未来研究的几个途径。