Gomez Gabby, Sittner Kelley J, Greensky Crystal
Department of Sociology, Macalester College, 1600 Grand Avenue, Saint Paul, MN, 55105-1899, USA.
Department of Sociology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA.
J Behav Med. 2025 Sep 9. doi: 10.1007/s10865-025-00598-3.
Indigenous Peoples experience the highest age-adjusted prevalence of type 2 diabetes of any racial group in the U.S. Though the management of type 2 diabetes requires regular healthcare visits, North American Indigenous individuals with diabetes do not always utilize the healthcare available to them, and this lack of utilization may lead to poor health outcomes over time. Drawing on literature showing that North American Indigenous patients experience discrimination in healthcare and that experiencing discrimination in healthcare is associated with healthcare avoidance and/or delay, the current study conceptualized unmet healthcare utilization as healthcare avoidance and used path analysis with longitudinal data (four points of data collection) to examine the relationships between healthcare discrimination, healthcare avoidance, and self-rated health in a sample of 192 Indigenous adults with type 2 diabetes from the northern Midwest U.S. We found that healthcare avoidance was negatively associated with baseline self-rated health, and that healthcare avoidance partially explained the negative effect of lifetime healthcare discrimination on self-rated health at the final follow-up of the study. These results show that healthcare avoidance statistically mediates the relationship between healthcare discrimination and self-rated health and suggest that healthcare avoidance is an important mechanism linking healthcare discrimination to worse self-rated health over time. Ultimately, we argue that creating more inclusive and less microaggressive healthcare spaces is important for individual health outcomes and macro-level health inequities. Continued efforts to understand instances of and to diminish healthcare mistreatment of Indigenous Peoples are recommended.
在美国,原住民是所有种族群体中年龄调整后2型糖尿病患病率最高的。尽管2型糖尿病的管理需要定期就医,但患有糖尿病的北美原住民并不总是利用现有的医疗服务,随着时间的推移,这种利用不足可能会导致健康状况不佳。有文献表明,北美原住民患者在医疗保健中受到歧视,而在医疗保健中受到歧视与避免就医和/或延迟就医有关,本研究将未得到满足的医疗服务利用概念化为避免就医,并使用路径分析和纵向数据(四个数据收集点)来检验医疗保健歧视、避免就医和自我健康评估之间的关系,样本来自美国中西部北部192名患有2型糖尿病的原住民成年人。我们发现,避免就医与基线自我健康评估呈负相关,并且在研究的最终随访中,避免就医部分解释了终身医疗保健歧视对自我健康评估的负面影响。这些结果表明,避免就医在统计学上介导了医疗保健歧视与自我健康评估之间的关系,并表明避免就医是随着时间推移将医疗保健歧视与更差的自我健康评估联系起来的重要机制。最终,我们认为创造更具包容性、减少微侵犯行为的医疗保健环境对于个人健康结果和宏观层面的健康不平等至关重要。建议继续努力了解原住民遭受医疗保健虐待的情况并减少此类情况。