Etowa Egbe B, Wong Josephine P, Antabe Roger, Omorodion Francisca, Etowa Josephine, Luginaah Isaac, Zinaic Rade, James Carl, Husbands Winston
Daphne Cockwell School of Nursing, Faculty of Community Services, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Health and Society, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Can J Public Health. 2025 Apr;116(2):231-242. doi: 10.17269/s41997-025-01048-y. Epub 2025 May 5.
We explored the determinants and health-related outcomes of everyday racism (EDR) experienced by Black men in four Ontario cities in the context of HIV.
Data were obtained from a CIHR-funded study that examined HIV vulnerability and resilience among Black men. The sample size was 866 (Ottawa [n = 210], Toronto [n = 343], London [n = 157], and Windsor [n = 156]). We applied the generalized linear model (GLM) to estimate the effects of EDR and other factors on (i) difficulty accessing healthcare and (ii) self-rated health. Next, using GLM, we determined the predictors of EDR. We measured difficulty accessing healthcare (difficulty accessing = 1, otherwise = 0) and self-rated health (good/very good/excellent = 1, otherwise = 0) as binary outcome variables. EDR was measured with the short version of the Everyday Discrimination Scale.
Of the Black men per city, 75‒85% experienced at least one of the five dimensions of EDR. EDR was associated with increased difficulty accessing health care, and fair to poor self-rated health (p < 0.05). EDR increased with residency in a smaller city (e.g. Windsor relative to Toronto), years of living in Canada, housing adequacy, traditional masculinity score, and individual resilience (p < 0.05). Collective resilience predicted reduced EDR.
Racism experiences persist among Black men in Ontario and remain a key determinant of healthcare access and well-being among Black men. A multipronged approach, including ending anti-Black racism through transformation of organizational and governmental policies, promoting collective resilience within communities, and encouraging social reconstruction of the Black masculine ideologies, may be a practical approach to improving their health outcomes.
我们探讨了安大略省四个城市的黑人男性在感染艾滋病毒背景下所经历的日常种族主义(EDR)的决定因素及其与健康相关的后果。
数据来自一项由加拿大卫生研究院(CIHR)资助的研究,该研究调查了黑人男性中的艾滋病毒易感性和恢复力。样本量为866人(渥太华[n = 210]、多伦多[n = 343]、伦敦[n = 157]和温莎[n = 156])。我们应用广义线性模型(GLM)来估计EDR和其他因素对以下两方面的影响:(i)获得医疗保健的困难程度;(ii)自我评估的健康状况。接下来,我们使用GLM确定EDR的预测因素。我们将获得医疗保健的困难程度(难以获得 = 1,否则 = 0)和自我评估的健康状况(良好/非常好/优秀 = 1,否则 = 0)作为二元结果变量。EDR使用《日常歧视量表》的简版进行测量。
每个城市的黑人男性中,75% - 85%经历过EDR五个维度中的至少一个维度。EDR与获得医疗保健困难程度增加以及自我评估健康状况为一般到较差相关(p < 0.05)。EDR随着居住在较小城市(如温莎相对于多伦多)、在加拿大居住的年限、住房充足程度、传统男子气概得分以及个人恢复力的增加而增加(p < 0.05)。集体恢复力可预测EDR的降低。
安大略省黑人男性中的种族主义经历依然存在,并且仍然是黑人男性获得医疗保健和幸福的关键决定因素。采取多管齐下的方法,包括通过转变组织和政府政策来消除反黑人种族主义、促进社区内的集体恢复力以及鼓励对黑人男性意识形态进行社会重构,可能是改善他们健康状况的切实可行方法。