Department of Sociology, University of Maryland, 3834 Campus Dr., Parren Mitchell Art-Sociology Building, College Park, MD, 20742, USA.
Department of Sociology, University of Texas at San Antonio, One UTSA Circle, MS 4.02.66, San Antonio, TX, 78249, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Dec;11(6):3544-3560. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01808-x. Epub 2023 Sep 27.
Numerous studies have highlighted mental health disparities based on race/ethnicity, nativity, and gender across different life stages. However, few have investigated how the intersectionality of these factors influences mental health trajectories during midlife to late life. This study fills this gap by adopting a life course-intersectional approach, viewing mental health trajectories as dynamic processes shaped by the combined influences of race/ethnicity, nativity, and gender. It explores social, psychological, and physiological pathways contributing to these disparities.
Using data from the Health and Retirement Study (2006-2018; N = 38,049 observations) and growth curve models, this study examines how intra-individual trends in depressive symptoms (measured as CES-D scale, 07) are influenced by the intersection of race/ethnicity, nativity, and gender. It also investigates the impact of objective and subjective social isolation and physical health on group disparities in mental health trajectories.
The findings reveal that, during mid- to early late-life, most Black and Hispanic Americans experience higher levels of depressive symptoms compared to their White counterparts (disparities ranging from 0.184 to 0.463 for men and 0.117 to 0.439 for women). However, this disadvantage diminishes for US-born Hispanic men and US-born Black women (0.014-0.031 faster decrease rates compared to US-born White), while it intensifies for Hispanic immigrants (0.017-0.018 slower decrease rates compared to US-born White) in advanced ages. Mediation analysis demonstrates that both social isolation and physical health contribute to these disparities, with physical health explaining a larger portion, particularly in differences between immigrant Hispanic women and US-born Whites.
This study underscores the importance of a life course-intersectional approach in understanding mental health disparities. It emphasizes the need for improved social welfare systems and community-level interventions targeting the specific challenges faced by older Hispanic immigrants, especially women who encounter multiple forms of oppression.
许多研究强调了基于种族/民族、出生和性别的心理健康差异,这些差异在不同的生命阶段都存在。然而,很少有研究调查这些因素的交叉如何影响从中年到晚年的心理健康轨迹。本研究通过采用生活轨迹交叉的方法填补了这一空白,将心理健康轨迹视为受种族/民族、出生和性别综合影响的动态过程。本研究探讨了导致这些差异的社会、心理和生理途径。
本研究使用来自健康与退休研究(2006-2018 年;N=38049 个观测值)的数据和增长曲线模型,研究了个体内抑郁症状(以 CES-D 量表衡量,07)的趋势如何受到种族/民族、出生和性别交叉的影响。还研究了客观和主观社会隔离以及身体健康对心理健康轨迹群体差异的影响。
研究结果表明,在从中年到早期晚年期间,与白人相比,大多数美国黑人和西班牙裔美国人经历了更高水平的抑郁症状(男性差异范围为 0.184 到 0.463,女性差异范围为 0.117 到 0.439)。然而,这种劣势对于美国出生的西班牙裔男性和美国出生的黑人女性而言有所减少(与美国出生的白人相比,下降速度快 0.014-0.031),而对于西班牙裔移民而言则有所加剧(与美国出生的白人相比,下降速度慢 0.017-0.018)在老年时。中介分析表明,社会隔离和身体健康都导致了这些差异,其中身体健康解释了更大的部分,特别是在移民西班牙裔妇女和美国出生的白人之间的差异。
本研究强调了采用生活轨迹交叉方法理解心理健康差异的重要性。它强调需要改善社会福利系统和针对老年西班牙裔移民面临的具体挑战的社区一级干预措施,特别是面临多种形式压迫的妇女。