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交叉性以及美国黑人中州级结构性种族主义、狂饮酒精饮料与吸烟状况之间的关联。

Intersectionality and the Association Between State-Level Structural Racism, Binge Alcohol Consumption, and Smoking Status Among Black Americans.

作者信息

Woodard Nathaniel, Butler James, Ghosh Debarchana, Green Kerry M, Knott Cheryl L

机构信息

Department of Community Health and Health Behavior, School of Public Health and Health Professions, University at Buffalo, 40 Goodyear Rd, Buffalo, NY, 14214, USA.

Department of Behavioral and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, College Park, College Park, MD, USA.

出版信息

J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Sep 20. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-02180-0.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Structural racism is associated with alcohol and tobacco use among Black Americans. There is a need to understand how this relationship differs within varying groups of Black Americans. This study assessed the moderating roles of age, gender, and income in the association between structural racism and binge alcohol consumption and tobacco smoking status among Black Americans.

METHODS

A state-level index of structural racism was merged with data from a national probability sample of 1946 Black Americans. Hierarchical linear and logistic regression models tested associations between structural racism (measured by residential segregation, and economic, incarceration, and educational inequities) and binge alcohol use and smoking status among Black Americans by stratified by age, gender, and income. Moderating effects of age, gender, and income were tested using slope estimate comparisons.

RESULTS

Results indicated statistically significant positive associations between incarceration disparities and binge drinking and smoking status among Black Americans below age 65. An inverse association was detected between education disparities and smoking status among Black Americans below age 65 and among higher-income Black Americans. Age, gender, and income were not significant moderators of these associations.

CONCLUSIONS

Age, gender, and income do not moderate the association between state-level structural racism and binge alcohol or tobacco use behaviors among the current sample of Black Americans.

IMPACT

Addressing structural racism may have implications for reducing participation in binge drinking and tobacco use behaviors among Black Americans, regardless of their age, gender, or income. This has implications for healthy equity and cancer prevention and control.

摘要

背景

结构性种族主义与美国黑人的酒精和烟草使用有关。有必要了解这种关系在美国黑人的不同群体中有何差异。本研究评估了年龄、性别和收入在美国黑人结构性种族主义与暴饮酒精消费及吸烟状况之间关联中的调节作用。

方法

将结构性种族主义的州级指数与来自1946名美国黑人的全国概率样本的数据合并。分层线性和逻辑回归模型通过按年龄、性别和收入分层,检验了结构性种族主义(以居住隔离、经济、监禁和教育不平等衡量)与美国黑人暴饮酒精使用和吸烟状况之间的关联。使用斜率估计比较来检验年龄、性别和收入的调节作用。

结果

结果表明,在65岁以下的美国黑人中,监禁差异与暴饮酒精及吸烟状况之间存在统计学上显著的正相关。在65岁以下的美国黑人以及高收入美国黑人中,教育差异与吸烟状况之间存在负相关。年龄、性别和收入不是这些关联的显著调节因素。

结论

在当前美国黑人样本中,年龄、性别和收入并未调节州级结构性种族主义与暴饮酒精或烟草使用行为之间的关联。

影响

解决结构性种族主义可能对减少美国黑人参与暴饮酒精和烟草使用行为有影响,无论其年龄、性别或收入如何。这对健康公平以及癌症预防和控制有影响。

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