Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, New York University School of Global Public Health, 708 Broadway, 4th floor, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, New York University School of Global Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
Int J Equity Health. 2024 Sep 30;23(1):195. doi: 10.1186/s12939-024-02280-7.
Despite research dedicated to understanding the health profiles and health-related outcomes of Hispanic individuals, the prevailing body of literature frequently homogenizes the Hispanic population, failing to address the role of race in Hispanic health discourse. Thus, the current study applies an intersectional lens to identify health differences and similarities among Hispanic subgroups.
Sociodemographic characteristics and health domain variables (i.e., health status, health services, and health behaviors) from participants (N = 11,192) were included in the analyses. Bivariate Chi-squared tests examined the relationship between sociodemographic and health domain variables Black Hispanic individuals, white Hispanic individuals, and non-Hispanic Black individuals.
Findings suggest that Non-Hispanic Black American individuals reported the highest rates of hypertension (49.09%) and diabetes (19.62%) compared to Black-Hispanic individuals (22.45% and 12.98%) and white Hispanic individuals (22.22% and 8.02%). Black Hispanic individuals reported the greatest proportion of asthma diagnoses (35.10%) and those who saw a doctor in the previous year (95.52%) compared to white Hispanic individuals (26.84%, and 91.10%, respectively) and non-Hispanic Black individuals ( 21.74%, and 94.69%, respectively).
Specifically, we found that several health behaviors and health-related outcomes significantly varied across different racial/ethnic groups, demonstrating the advantage of an intersectional approach to identify health disparities among racially diverse ethnic groups.
We encourage the development of health care services with an awareness of the complexities resulting from racial differences within the Hispanic diaspora.
尽管有大量研究致力于了解西班牙裔个体的健康状况和与健康相关的结果,但现有文献普遍将西班牙裔人群同质化,未能解决西班牙裔健康话语中的种族问题。因此,本研究应用交叉视角来确定西班牙裔亚群体之间的健康差异和相似之处。
本研究分析了参与者(N=11192)的社会人口统计学特征和健康领域变量(即健康状况、卫生服务和健康行为)。采用卡方检验比较了黑西班牙裔个体、白西班牙裔个体和非西班牙裔黑个体在社会人口统计学和健康领域变量之间的关系。
研究结果表明,与黑西班牙裔个体(22.45%和 12.98%)和白西班牙裔个体(22.22%和 8.02%)相比,非西班牙裔黑个体报告高血压(49.09%)和糖尿病(19.62%)的比例最高。黑西班牙裔个体报告哮喘诊断的比例最高(35.10%),去年看医生的比例最高(95.52%),与白西班牙裔个体(分别为 26.84%和 91.10%)和非西班牙裔黑个体(分别为 21.74%和 94.69%)相比。
具体而言,我们发现,几种健康行为和与健康相关的结果在不同种族/族裔群体之间存在显著差异,这表明采用交叉视角识别不同种族多样化的族裔群体中的健康差异具有优势。
我们鼓励制定卫生保健服务计划时,要意识到西班牙裔侨民中种族差异所带来的复杂性。