Nie Fanhao
Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, MA, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Apr;12(2):1041-1051. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-01941-1. Epub 2024 Feb 13.
Prior research has shown that experiencing religious discrimination is tied to adverse physical and mental health outcomes. However, less known is whether or not religious discrimination may influence one's risk of smoking. In particular, there is a paucity of research examining the impacts of religious discrimination on smoking for Asians in the United States, whose experience of religious discrimination is heavily racialized. To fill in these gaps, in this study, 356 Asian and Asian American adults living in the US were surveyed. The key results suggest that perceived religious discrimination was associated with a higher risk of smoking among Asians and Asian Americans. Meanwhile, this deleterious effect of religious discrimination does not vary by important sociodemographic variables, such as ethnicity, religious identity, gender, and acculturation. Surprisingly, once controlling for religious discrimination, racial discrimination was no longer associated with smoking. Therefore, when it comes to smoking, it may be possible that religion is a more hazardous source of minority stress than race for Asians and Asian Americans.
先前的研究表明,经历宗教歧视与不良的身心健康结果有关。然而,宗教歧视是否会影响一个人的吸烟风险却鲜为人知。特别是,针对美国亚裔宗教歧视对吸烟影响的研究匮乏,而他们的宗教歧视经历严重地被种族化了。为了填补这些空白,在本研究中,对356名居住在美国的亚裔和亚裔美国成年人进行了调查。关键结果表明,感知到的宗教歧视与亚裔和亚裔美国成年人中较高的吸烟风险相关。同时,宗教歧视的这种有害影响并不会因重要的社会人口学变量(如种族、宗教身份、性别和文化适应程度)而有所不同。令人惊讶的是,一旦控制了宗教歧视,种族歧视就不再与吸烟相关。因此,就吸烟而言,对于亚裔和亚裔美国成年人来说,宗教可能是比种族更具危害性的少数群体压力源。