Doherty Elaine E, Green Kerry M, Bugbee Brittany A
Department of Behavioral and Community Health, University of Maryland, School of Public Health Building, 4200 Valley Drive, College Park, MD, 20742, USA.
Department of Behavioral and Community Health, University of Maryland, School of Public Health Building, 4200 Valley Drive, College Park, MD, 20742, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Dec;363:117489. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117489. Epub 2024 Nov 8.
Black Americans continue to be 1.5 times more likely to experience premature death with life expectancy up to six years shorter than their white American counterparts. These racial disparities in mortality translate into Black Americans being much more likely to experience the deaths of family members at younger ages in the life course. This study examines the impact of experiencing familial death on the survivor's mortality risk among a cohort of Black men and women. Data collected from a community cohort first assessed in 1966 (at age 6) and followed at three additional time points (ages 16, 32, and 42) are supplemented with mortality data, retrieved from the National Death Index, that include deaths through 2021 (modal age 61). Among the 941 participants who survived to age 32 and had information on familial deaths, 38.9% experienced the death of a parent, child, or sibling by age 32, and close to one-fifth (18.2%) died between ages 33 and 61. Cox regression models that adjust for early life covariates revealed a 48% higher mortality risk among those who experienced at least one familial death by age 32; separate models provide evidence that the accumulation of familial deaths is related to midlife mortality risk. Models of relationship type indicate that death of a mother or sibling is associated with a 74% and 77% increase in mortality risk, respectively. Results highlight the heavy burden of premature familial mortality on Black Americans and its adverse impact on one's own life expectancy.
美国黑人过早死亡的可能性仍然是美国白人的1.5倍,预期寿命比美国白人短6年。这些死亡率方面的种族差异意味着美国黑人在人生历程中更有可能在年轻时经历家庭成员的死亡。本研究考察了在一组黑人男性和女性中,经历家庭成员死亡对幸存者死亡风险的影响。从一个社区队列收集的数据于1966年首次评估(当时年龄为6岁),并在另外三个时间点(16岁、32岁和42岁)进行跟踪,这些数据辅以从国家死亡指数中检索到的死亡率数据,其中包括截至2021年的死亡情况(平均年龄61岁)。在941名活到32岁且有家庭成员死亡信息的参与者中,38.9%的人在32岁之前经历了父母、子女或兄弟姐妹的死亡,近五分之一(18.2%)的人在33岁至61岁之间死亡。对早期生活协变量进行调整的Cox回归模型显示,在32岁之前经历至少一次家庭成员死亡 的人死亡率风险高出48%;单独的模型表明,家庭成员死亡的累积与中年死亡风险有关。关系类型模型表明,母亲或兄弟姐妹的死亡分别使死亡风险增加74%和77%。结果凸显了过早的家庭死亡给美国黑人带来的沉重负担及其对自身预期寿命的不利影响。