Black identity and internal health attributions of second generation black immigrant women.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES Ethnicity & Health Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1080/13557858.2024.2422819
Claudette Kirkman, Cierra Stanton
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Abstract

Objective: Despite second generation Black immigrants being a rapidly growing population, they are often overlooked in health attribution research that treats Black populations as a monolithic group. Very few studies focus on how discrimination, societal pressure, and racial identity play a role in the health attributions of Black immigrant women. Even fewer studies have examined this relationship solely with second generation Black immigrant women. Research has shown, however, that increased racial and ethnic identity but decreased experiences with racism are related to higher internal health attributions in Black populations. Thus, we addressed this dearth in research in the current study by examining the relationship between racial centrality, racism stress, and internal health attributions in a sample of 123 second generation Black immigrant women.

Design: Health attributions were assessed using the Illness Attribution Scale, racism stress using the Schedule of Racist Events, and racial centrality using the Multidimensional Inventory of Black Identity. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to test the hypotheses that lower levels of racism stress, but higher ratings of racial centrality would relate to higher scores of internal health attributions.

Results: A positive relationship was found between racial centrality and internal health attributions but not racism stress.

Conclusion: The results indicated that stronger affirmations with Black identity are associated with a greater importance of the causes of illness to be within one's perceived control for second generation Black immigrant women, which highlights the importance of examining wthin-group differences via collective identity measures to better explain health attribution behavioirs.

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第二代黑人移民妇女的黑人身份和内部健康归因。
目的:尽管第二代黑人移民是一个快速增长的群体,但他们在健康归因研究中却常常被忽视,因为健康归因研究将黑人群体视为一个单一的群体。很少有研究关注歧视、社会压力和种族认同如何在黑人移民妇女的健康归因中发挥作用。仅针对第二代黑人移民妇女的研究更是少之又少。然而,研究表明,黑人人口中种族和民族身份认同的增加以及种族主义经历的减少与较高的内部健康归因有关。因此,在本研究中,我们以 123 名第二代黑人移民妇女为样本,研究了种族中心性、种族主义压力和内部健康归因之间的关系,从而解决了研究不足的问题:设计:使用疾病归因量表评估健康归因,使用种族主义事件表评估种族主义压力,使用黑人身份多维量表评估种族中心性。我们进行了多元回归分析,以检验以下假设:较低的种族主义压力水平和较高的种族中心地位评分将与较高的内部健康归因评分相关:结果:种族中心地位与内部健康归因之间存在正相关关系,但与种族主义压力无关:结果表明,对于第二代黑人移民妇女来说,对黑人身份更强烈的肯定与疾病原因在自己控制范围内的重要性更高相关,这突出了通过集体身份测量来研究群体内差异以更好地解释健康归因行为的重要性。
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来源期刊
Ethnicity & Health
Ethnicity & Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethnicity & Health is an international academic journal designed to meet the world-wide interest in the health of ethnic groups. It embraces original papers from the full range of disciplines concerned with investigating the relationship between ’ethnicity’ and ’health’ (including medicine and nursing, public health, epidemiology, social sciences, population sciences, and statistics). The journal also covers issues of culture, religion, gender, class, migration, lifestyle and racism, in so far as they relate to health and its anthropological and social aspects.
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