Department of Psychology, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.
Department of Foundations of Medicine, New York University Long Island School of Medicine, Long Island, NY, USA.
J Urban Health. 2023 Jun;100(3):431-435. doi: 10.1007/s11524-023-00743-w. Epub 2023 Jun 29.
Previous research has documented the association between racial discrimination and poor sleep quality. However, few studies have examined this association during the COVID-19 pandemic when racial discrimination is on the rise due to structural injustice and racism against people of color. Using data from the Health, Ethnicity, and Pandemic (HEAP) Study, a nationally representative survey of US adults, we assessed the association between racial discrimination and sleep quality among overall adults and by race and ethnicity. We found that racial discrimination during the pandemic was significantly associated with higher risks of poor sleep quality among non-Hispanic Black (OR = 2.19, 95% CI: 1.13-4.25) and Asian (OR = 2.75, 95% CI: 1.53-4.94) participants, but not among the other groups. The results suggested that sleep quality among Black and Asian populations may have been disproportionately affected by racial discrimination during the pandemic. Further study is needed to assess the causal relationship between racial discrimination and sleep quality.
先前的研究记录了种族歧视与睡眠质量差之间的关联。然而,在新冠疫情期间,由于针对有色人种的结构性不公正和种族主义,种族歧视有所上升,鲜有研究对此进行调查。本研究利用美国成年人全国代表性调查健康、种族和大流行(HEAP)研究的数据,评估了疫情期间种族歧视与整体成年人以及不同种族和族裔的睡眠质量之间的关联。我们发现,疫情期间的种族歧视与非西班牙裔黑人(OR=2.19,95%CI:1.13-4.25)和亚裔(OR=2.75,95%CI:1.53-4.94)参与者中较差的睡眠质量风险显著相关,但与其他群体无关。结果表明,在疫情期间,黑人和亚裔人群的睡眠质量可能受到种族歧视的不成比例影响。需要进一步研究来评估种族歧视与睡眠质量之间的因果关系。