Racial/ethnic/gender-Based Differences in Health Trajectories Among American Older Adults: 10-Year Longitudinal Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Social Work in Public Health Pub Date : 2024-02-17 Epub Date: 2024-02-28 DOI:10.1080/19371918.2024.2320795
Dexia Kong, Peiyi Lu, Joan Davitt, Mack Shelley
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Abstract

Health disparity by race/ethnicity or gender has been well-documented. However, few researchers have examined health outcomes based on the intersection of individuals' race, ethnicity, and gender or investigated various health dimensions. Guided by an intersectionality framework, this study explores racial/ethnic/gender-based differences in trajectories of multiple health outcomes over a ten-year period among American older adults. Longitudinal data from the Health and Retirement Study (2004-2014) were used (N = 16,654). Older adults (65+) were stratified into six mutually-exclusive groups based on their race, ethnicity, and gender: Non-Hispanic (NH) White Men, NH White Women, NH Black Men, NH Black Women, Hispanic Men, and Hispanic Women. Growth curve models examined the trajectories of three health measures, including cognitive function, physical function limitations (i.e. activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living), and depressive symptoms. NH White men and women reported significantly better outcomes in cognition and physical function trajectories than racial/ethnic minority groups. Women in all racial/ethnic groups had more depressive symptoms but better cognition than men. Hispanic women reported the most depressive symptoms. Hispanic women and NH Black women had the worst physical function limitations. NH Black men/women were the most disadvantaged in cognition. Racial/ethnic/gender-based differences were stable over time in all health trajectories. Study findings highlight the utility of an intersectional framework in understanding how multiple social identities intersect to generate protective and/or risk effects on cognitive, mental, and physical health. Multilevel intervention strategies are warranted to reduce the persistent health inequity gap.

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美国老年人健康轨迹中基于种族/民族/性别的差异:来自健康与退休研究的 10 年纵向证据。
按种族/族裔或性别划分的健康差异已得到充分证实。然而,很少有研究人员根据个人的种族、民族和性别的交叉点来研究健康结果,或调查各种健康维度。在交叉性框架的指导下,本研究探讨了美国老年人在十年间多种健康结果轨迹中基于种族/民族/性别的差异。研究使用了健康与退休研究(2004-2014 年)的纵向数据(N = 16654)。根据种族、民族和性别,老年人(65 岁以上)被分为六个相互排斥的群体:非西班牙裔 (NH) 白人男性、NH 白人女性、NH 黑人男性、NH 黑人女性、西班牙裔男性和西班牙裔女性。生长曲线模型研究了三种健康指标的变化轨迹,包括认知功能、身体功能限制(即日常生活活动和日常生活工具性活动)和抑郁症状。与少数种族/族裔群体相比,新罕布什尔州的白人男性和女性在认知功能和身体功能轨迹方面的结果要好得多。所有种族/族裔群体中,女性的抑郁症状较多,但认知能力优于男性。西班牙裔妇女报告的抑郁症状最多。西语裔妇女和新罕布什尔州黑人妇女的身体功能限制最严重。新罕布什尔州黑人男性/女性的认知能力最差。在所有健康轨迹中,种族/族裔/性别差异随着时间的推移保持稳定。研究结果凸显了交叉框架在理解多重社会身份如何相互交织对认知、心理和身体健康产生保护和/或风险影响方面的作用。需要采取多层次的干预策略来缩小持续存在的健康不平等差距。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: Social Work in Public Health (recently re-titled from the Journal of Health & Social Policy to better reflect its focus) provides a much-needed forum for social workers and those in health and health-related professions. This crucial journal focuses on all aspects of policy and social and health care considerations in policy-related matters, including its development, formulation, implementation, evaluation, review, and revision. By blending conceptual and practical considerations, Social Work in Public Health enables authors from many disciplines to examine health and social policy issues, concerns, and questions.
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