Department of Psychology, Chapman University, Orange, CA, United States.
Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States.
Front Public Health. 2024 Jan 15;12:1258348. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1258348. eCollection 2024.
Approximately 32 million Americans have type 2 diabetes, and that number continues to grow. Higher prevalence rates are observed among certain subgroups, including members of marginalized racial/ethnic groups as well as residents of disordered neighborhoods (i.e., those with more trash and vandalism). Institutionalized discriminatory practices have resulted in disproportionate representation of marginalized racial/ethnic groups in disordered neighborhoods compared to non-Hispanic Whites. These neighborhood disparities may partially contribute to health disparities, given that signs of neighborhood disorder often relate to a general withdrawal from the neighborhood, minimizing opportunities for both physical and social engagement. Yet, research suggests variability across racial/ethnic groups both in reporting rates of neighborhood disorder and in the extent to which neighborhood disorder is interpreted as posing a threat to health and well-being.
Using 2016-2018 Health and Retirement Study data (n = 10,419, mean age = 67 years), a representative sample of older US adults, this study examined the possibility of racial/ethnic differences in associations between perceived neighborhood disorder and type 2 diabetes risk. Participants reported their perceptions of neighborhood disorder and type 2 diabetes status. Weighted logistic regression models predicted type 2 diabetes risk by perceived neighborhood disorder, race/ethnicity, and their interaction.
Non-Hispanic Blacks and Hispanics had higher type 2 diabetes risk; these two groups also reported more disorder in their neighborhoods compared to non-Hispanic Whites. Perceiving more neighborhood disorder was associated with increased type 2 diabetes risk, but the interaction between race/ethnicity and disorder was not significant.
Findings from the current study suggest that the negative effects of perceiving neighborhood disorder, a neighborhood-level stressor, extend to increased type 2 diabetes risk.
大约有 3200 万美国人患有 2 型糖尿病,且这个数字还在不断增加。某些亚组人群的患病率更高,包括边缘化的种族/族裔群体的成员以及居住在混乱街区的居民(即那些垃圾和破坏行为更多的街区)。制度化的歧视性做法导致边缘化的种族/族裔群体在混乱街区的代表性不成比例,而非西班牙裔白人则不成比例。鉴于邻里失序的迹象往往与人们对邻里的普遍疏离有关,从而减少了身体和社交参与的机会,这些邻里差异可能部分导致了健康差异。然而,研究表明,在报告邻里失序率以及邻里失序对健康和福祉构成威胁的程度方面,不同种族/族裔群体之间存在差异。
使用 2016-2018 年健康与退休研究数据(n=10419,平均年龄 67 岁),这是美国老年人的代表性样本,本研究探讨了感知邻里失序与 2 型糖尿病风险之间的关联在不同种族/族裔群体之间是否存在差异。参与者报告了他们对邻里失序的看法和 2 型糖尿病的状况。加权逻辑回归模型根据感知的邻里失序、种族/族裔以及它们的相互作用预测 2 型糖尿病的风险。
非西班牙裔黑人和西班牙裔的 2 型糖尿病风险更高;与非西班牙裔白人相比,这两个群体报告的邻里失序情况也更多。感知到更多的邻里失序与 2 型糖尿病风险增加有关,但种族/族裔和失序之间的相互作用并不显著。
当前研究的结果表明,感知邻里失序(一种邻里层面的压力源)的负面影响延伸到 2 型糖尿病风险增加。