Siegel Michael, Rieders Madeline, Rieders Hannah, Moumneh Jinan, Asfour Julia, Oh Jinseo, Oh Seungjin
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, 636 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, 636 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2023 Aug;115(4):338-352. doi: 10.1016/j.jnma.2023.07.003. Epub 2023 Jul 25.
Introduction Structural racism is increasingly being recognized as a fundamental cause of racial health disparities. We used a novel measure of structural racism at the state level to examine the relationship between structural racism and disparities in death rates from firearm homicide, infant mortality, HIV, diabetes, stroke, hypertension, asthma, and kidney disease between non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic White people in the United States. Methods We used confirmatory factor analysis to measure the latent construct of structural racism for all 50 states. The model included seven indicators across the structural racism domains of residential segregation, economic status/employment, education, incarceration, political participation and representation, environmental racism, and racial equity inclusion. Weights for each of the indicators were determined by examining alternative models and selecting the model with the best fit statistics. The resulting factor scores, representing the level of structural racism in each state across the seven domains, were then used as predictor variables in a series of linear regressions with the ratio of Black to White death rates for each health outcome as the dependent variables. Results We found significant relationships between higher levels of the latent structural racism measure and greater disparities between non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic White people in age-adjusted death rates for firearm homicide, infant mortality, HIV, asthma, and obesity. The magnitude of this relationship was greatest for firearm homicide, with each one standard deviation increase in a state's structural racism factor score being associated with an increase of 4.54 (95% CI, 2.91-6.17) in that state's Black-White firearm homicide rate ratio. Conclusions This research provides further evidence that structural racism is a fundamental cause of racial health disparities and that to repair these inequities, macro-level changes in societal structures, institutions, resource allocation, representation, and power will be necessary.
引言 结构性种族主义日益被视为种族健康差距的一个根本原因。我们使用了一种州层面结构性种族主义的新衡量方法,来研究结构性种族主义与美国非西班牙裔黑人和非西班牙裔白人之间在枪支凶杀死亡率、婴儿死亡率、艾滋病毒、糖尿病、中风、高血压、哮喘和肾病方面的差距之间的关系。
方法 我们使用验证性因素分析来衡量所有50个州的结构性种族主义潜在结构。该模型包括居住隔离、经济状况/就业、教育、监禁、政治参与和代表性、环境种族主义以及种族公平包容等结构性种族主义领域的七个指标。通过检验替代模型并选择拟合统计量最佳的模型来确定每个指标的值。然后,将代表每个州在七个领域的结构性种族主义水平的所得因素得分用作一系列线性回归中的预测变量,将每种健康结果的黑人与白人死亡率之比作为因变量。
结果 我们发现,潜在的结构性种族主义衡量指标水平较高与非西班牙裔黑人和非西班牙裔白人在枪支凶杀、婴儿死亡率、艾滋病毒、哮喘和肥胖症的年龄调整死亡率方面的差距更大之间存在显著关系。这种关系在枪支凶杀方面最为显著,一个州的结构性种族主义因素得分每增加一个标准差,该州的黑白枪支凶杀率之比就会增加4.54(95%CI,2.91 - 6.17)。
结论 这项研究提供了进一步的证据,表明结构性种族主义是种族健康差距的一个根本原因,并且要修复这些不平等,社会结构、机构、资源分配、代表性和权力方面的宏观层面变化将是必要的。