Bergman Alanna J, Szanton Sarah L, LaFave Sarah E, Fashaw-Walters Shekinah A, Taylor Janiece L, Thorpe Roland J, Nkimbeng Manka
Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Center for Infectious Disease and Nursing Innovation - Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Feb;12(1):262-272. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01870-5. Epub 2023 Nov 29.
The purpose of this study was to develop a deep understanding of the lived experiences of structural racism and discrimination among older Black Americans' and their perceptions of structural racism across their lives. We also considered individual and community resilience capacity and response in the face of systemic racism.
In-depth interviews were conducted with Black community-dwelling adults aged 55 and older in and around Baltimore City. The interview guide used nine contexts to explore perceptions and experiences with structural racism over the life course. Two researchers used reflexive thematic analysis to code and analyze the data.
Participants endorsed structural racism to varying degrees across contexts of education, employment, neighborhood, healthcare, and income/wealth. Participants who denied structural racism placed blame for Black underachievement on factors such as personal and community deficiencies, unsafe neighborhoods, and institutional indifference. There was broad agreement about the existence of structural racism within the domains of policing and violence but participants were largely ambivalent about other domains such as environment, media, and civics. Resilience factors that helped individuals to resist and rebound from racism emerged as an unexpected and important theme.
We used Public Health Critical Race Praxis and the Cells to Society frameworks to contextualize these findings. Due to the ubiquitous nature of racism, individuals may not fully appreciate the impact of structural racism and its impact on Black well-being. This ordinariness of racism is harmful but may simultaneously contribute to resilience within Baltimore's Black community.
本研究旨在深入了解美国老年黑人所经历的结构性种族主义和歧视,以及他们对一生中结构性种族主义的看法。我们还考虑了个人和社区在面对系统性种族主义时的复原力以及应对方式。
对巴尔的摩市及其周边地区年龄在55岁及以上的黑人社区成年居民进行了深入访谈。访谈指南使用了九个背景来探讨在生命历程中对结构性种族主义的看法和经历。两名研究人员使用反思性主题分析对数据进行编码和分析。
参与者在教育、就业、社区、医疗保健和收入/财富等背景下对结构性种族主义的认可程度各不相同。否认结构性种族主义的参与者将黑人成就不佳归咎于个人和社区缺陷、不安全的社区以及机构冷漠等因素。在治安和暴力领域,人们广泛认同结构性种族主义的存在,但参与者在环境、媒体和公民等其他领域大多持矛盾态度。帮助个人抵制种族主义并从中反弹的复原力因素成为一个意外且重要的主题。
我们使用公共卫生批判种族实践和从细胞到社会的框架来解读这些发现。由于种族主义无处不在,个人可能并未充分认识到结构性种族主义的影响及其对黑人福祉的影响。这种种族主义的普遍性是有害的,但同时可能有助于巴尔的摩黑人社区的复原力。