Meier A, Kamp Dush C, VanBergen A M, Clark S, Manning W
College of Liberal Arts, University of Minnesota.
Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota.
J Marriage Fam. 2025 Feb;87(1):258-279. doi: 10.1111/jomf.13023. Epub 2024 Jul 7.
This paper assesses stress disparities among marginalized parents in 2020-21 during the COVID-19 pandemic through the mechanism of healthcare discrimination.
The pandemic upended the lives of American families and had particularly stark mental health consequences for women, racial and ethnic minority (REM), and sexual and gender minority (SGM) parents. Scholars have been called to understand these unequal experiences via marginalizing mechanisms rather than using race, gender, and sexual identities as proxies for racism, sexism, and cis-heterosexism.
Structural equation modeling was used to test associations between marginalized identities and parental stress about COVID among partnered parents using healthcare discrimination, a marginalizing mechanism, as a mediator. The data come from The National Couples' Health and Time Study, a population-representative study of couples in the U.S.
Findings indicate that compared to non-marginalized parents, Black parents, women, transgender and non-binary parents, and gay, lesbian, and bisexual parents experienced higher levels of parental stress about COVID through heightened healthcare discrimination. When accounting for healthcare discrimination, only one marginalized identity-that of women-was directly associated with parental stress about COVID along with the indirect relationship through healthcare discrimination.
These findings highlight healthcare discrimination as a process that puts marginalized parents at risk for heightened stress. Parental stress has the potential to accumulate across the life course and crossover to children and communities.
本文通过医疗保健歧视机制评估了2020 - 2021年新冠疫情期间边缘化父母之间的压力差异。
疫情打乱了美国家庭的生活,对女性、种族和少数民族(REM)以及性和性别少数群体(SGM)父母的心理健康产生了尤为明显的影响。学者们被呼吁通过边缘化机制来理解这些不平等的经历,而不是将种族、性别和性身份作为种族主义、性别歧视和异性恋至上主义的替代指标。
使用结构方程模型,以医疗保健歧视这一边缘化机制作为中介,来测试边缘化身份与伴侣父母对新冠疫情的压力之间的关联。数据来自《全国夫妻健康与时间研究》,这是一项对美国夫妻具有人口代表性的研究。
研究结果表明,与非边缘化父母相比,黑人父母、女性、跨性别和非二元性别父母,以及男同性恋、女同性恋和双性恋父母,由于医疗保健歧视加剧,对新冠疫情的父母压力水平更高。在考虑医疗保健歧视因素后,只有一种边缘化身份——女性身份——与对新冠疫情的父母压力直接相关,同时还通过医疗保健歧视存在间接关系。
这些发现凸显了医疗保健歧视是一个使边缘化父母面临压力加剧风险的过程。父母压力有可能在整个生命历程中累积,并影响到孩子和社区。