Ashe Jason, Bentley-Edwards Keisha, Skipper Antonius, Cuevas Adolfo, Vieytes Christian Maino, Bah Kristie, Evans Michele K, Zonderman Alan B, Waldstein Shari R
Laboratory of Epidemiology and Population Sciences, National Institute On Aging, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Aug 19. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-02113-x.
This cross-sectional study examined whether religious coping buffered the associations between racial discrimination and several modifiable cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors-systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP), glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), body mass index (BMI), and cholesterol-in a sample of African American women and men.
Participant data were taken from the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity Across the Life Span study (N = 815; 55.2% women; 30-64 years old). Racial discrimination and religious coping were self-reported. CVD risk factors were clinically assessed.
In sex-stratified hierarchical regression analyses adjusted for age, socioeconomic status, and medication use, findings revealed several significant interactive associations and opposite effects by sex. Among men who experienced racial discrimination, religious coping was negatively related to systolic BP and HbA1c. However, in men reporting no prior discrimination, religious coping was positively related to most risk factors. Among women who had experienced racial discrimination, greater religious coping was associated with higher HbA1c and BMI. The lowest levels of CVD risk were observed among women who seldom used religious coping but experienced discrimination.
Religious coping might mitigate the effects of racial discrimination on CVD risk for African American men but not women. Additional work is needed to understand whether reinforcing these coping strategies only benefits those who have experienced discrimination. It is also possible that religion may not buffer the effects of other psychosocial stressors linked with elevated CVD risk.
这项横断面研究调查了在非裔美国男性和女性样本中,宗教应对方式是否缓冲了种族歧视与几种可改变的心血管疾病(CVD)风险因素——收缩压和舒张压(BP)、糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)、体重指数(BMI)和胆固醇——之间的关联。
参与者数据取自“跨生命周期多样性社区中的健康老龄化”研究(N = 815;55.2%为女性;年龄在30 - 64岁之间)。种族歧视和宗教应对方式通过自我报告获取。心血管疾病风险因素通过临床评估得出。
在对年龄、社会经济地位和药物使用进行调整的性别分层分层回归分析中,研究结果显示了几种显著的交互关联以及不同性别的相反影响。在经历种族歧视的男性中,宗教应对方式与收缩压和糖化血红蛋白呈负相关。然而,在报告未经历过歧视的男性中,宗教应对方式与大多数风险因素呈正相关。在经历种族歧视的女性中,更强的宗教应对方式与更高的糖化血红蛋白和体重指数相关。在很少使用宗教应对方式但经历过歧视的女性中,观察到心血管疾病风险水平最低。
宗教应对方式可能减轻种族歧视对非裔美国男性心血管疾病风险的影响,但对女性则不然。需要进一步开展工作来了解强化这些应对策略是否仅对那些经历过歧视的人有益。宗教也有可能无法缓冲与心血管疾病风险升高相关的其他社会心理压力源的影响。