Hoven Christina W, Krasnova Anna, Bresnahan Michaeline, Sun Xiaoxiao, Musa George, Geronazzo-Alman Lupo, Ryan Megan, Skokauskas Norbert, Amsel Lawrence, Svob Connie, Goodwin Renee D, Zemeck Heather, Cheslack-Postava Keely
Global Psychiatric Epidemiology Group, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University-New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Jul 17. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-02093-y.
Racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic health disparities became evident during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study explores whether these disparities extend to the content of worries.
We surveyed 1,222 participants from three metropolitan New York City (NYC) based cohorts through telephone interviews conducted from March to September 2020. Worries were assessed using 37 dichotomous questionnaire items, and exploratory factor analysis derived ten categories of worry. Factor scores were analyzed in generalized linear mixed models to examine their associations with race/ethnicity and household income, adjusting for covariates.
The most prevalent worry items pertained to U.S. and world politics, American values, health concerns, and return to normalcy. Higher household income was associated with lower worry about economic needs, job/employment, and violence/victimization, while violence/victimization worries were strongly associated with Asian, Hispanic, Black, and multiracial or other race/ethnicity.
During early COVID-19, lower-income and minoritized race and ethnic groups were disproportionately affected by economic and violence/victimization worries, while other worries showed minor variations by income or race/ethnicity.
种族、族裔和社会经济方面的健康差异在新冠疫情期间变得明显。本研究探讨这些差异是否延伸至担忧的内容。
我们通过2020年3月至9月进行的电话访谈,对来自纽约市三个大都市队列的1222名参与者进行了调查。使用37个二分制问卷项目评估担忧情况,并通过探索性因素分析得出了十类担忧。在广义线性混合模型中分析因素得分,以检验它们与种族/族裔和家庭收入的关联,并对协变量进行调整。
最普遍的担忧项目涉及美国和世界政治、美国价值观、健康问题以及恢复正常状态。较高的家庭收入与对经济需求、工作/就业以及暴力/受害情况的较低担忧相关,而对暴力/受害情况的担忧与亚裔、西班牙裔、黑人以及多种族或其他种族/族裔密切相关。
在新冠疫情早期,低收入以及少数族裔群体在经济和暴力/受害情况担忧方面受到的影响尤为严重,而其他担忧在收入或种族/族裔方面的差异较小。