Department of Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Department of Surgery, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO.
J Surg Res. 2024 May;297:109-120. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2023.12.019. Epub 2024 Mar 14.
Health disparities in the Asian and Pacific Islander Americans (APIAs) community have not been well described, unlike non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic communities. However, there has been a rise in violence against the APIA community. This study explores and characterizes violent death by incident (e.g., homicide, suicide), weapon (e.g., firearm, strangulation), and location types among APIAs as they compare with other racial or ethnic groups.
We used the National Violent Death Reporting System from 2003 to 2018 to characterize violent deaths among APIA and compared them to all other races. We compared these racial categories in two ways. First, we compared all races as a categorical variable that included six non-Hispanic racial categories including "Other or unspecified" and "two or more races. We then created a binary variable of APIA versus All Other Races for analysis. We explored the incident type of death, substance abuse disorders, mental health history, and gang involvement among other variables. We used Chi-square tests for categorical variables and Mann-Whitney U-tests for continuous variables.
Overall, APIAs had a unique pattern of violent death. APIAs were more likely to commit suicide (71.74%-62.21%, P<0.001) and less likely to die of homicide than other races (17.56%-24.31%, P<0.001). In the cases of homicide, APIAs were more likely to have their deaths precipitated by another crime (40.87% versus 27.87%, P < 0.001). APIAs were more than twice as likely to die of strangulation than other races (39.93%-18.06%, P<0.001). Conversely, APIAs were less likely to die by firearm than other races (29.69-51.51, P<0.001).
APIAs have a unique pattern of violence based on analysis of data from the National Violent Death Reporting System. Our data reveal a significant difference in the incident, weapon and location type as compared to Americans of other races, which begs further inquiry into the patterns of change in time and factors that contribute to inter-racial differences in death patterns.
与非西班牙裔黑人和西班牙裔社区不同,亚太裔美国人(APIAs)社区的健康差距尚未得到充分描述。然而,针对 APIA 社区的暴力事件有所增加。本研究探讨并描述了 APIA 人群中因事件(例如,凶杀、自杀)、武器(例如,枪支、勒死)和地点类型而导致的暴力死亡,并将其与其他种族或族裔群体进行了比较。
我们使用了 2003 年至 2018 年的国家暴力死亡报告系统,以描述 APIA 人群中的暴力死亡情况,并将其与所有其他种族进行了比较。我们通过两种方式比较了这些种族类别。首先,我们将所有种族作为一个类别变量进行比较,其中包括六个非西班牙裔种族类别,包括“其他或未指定”和“两种或两种以上种族”。然后,我们为分析创建了 APIA 与所有其他种族的二元变量。我们探讨了死亡事件类型、药物滥用障碍、心理健康史和帮派参与等其他变量。我们使用卡方检验进行分类变量分析,使用曼-惠特尼 U 检验进行连续变量分析。
总体而言,APIAs 的暴力死亡模式具有独特性。与其他种族相比,APIAs 更有可能自杀(71.74%-62.21%,P<0.001),而死于凶杀的可能性较小(17.56%-24.31%,P<0.001)。在凶杀案中,APIAs 更有可能因其他犯罪而导致死亡(40.87%对 27.87%,P<0.001)。APIAs 死于勒死的可能性是其他种族的两倍多(39.93%-18.06%,P<0.001)。相反,APIAs 死于枪支的可能性低于其他种族(29.69-51.51,P<0.001)。
通过对国家暴力死亡报告系统数据的分析,APIAs 的暴力模式具有独特性。与其他种族的美国人相比,我们的数据显示在事件、武器和地点类型方面存在显著差异,这需要进一步探究时间变化模式和导致种族间死亡模式差异的因素。