State Minimum Wage Increases As a Potential Policy Lever to Reduce Black-White Disparities in Hypertension.

IF 2.6 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health Equity Pub Date : 2023-05-23 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1089/heq.2022.0192
Brittany L Brown-Podgorski, Stephanie Doran-Brubaker, Shetal Vohra-Gupta
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Abstract

Introduction: Black adults are disproportionately burdened by hypertension. Income inequality is associated with elevated risk of hypertension. Minimum wage increases have been explored as a potential policy lever to address the disparate impact of hypertension on this population. However, these increases may have no significant impact on health among Black adults due to structural racism and "diminished gain" of health effects from socioeconomic resources. This study assesses the relationship between state minimum wage increases and Black-White disparities in hypertension.

Methods: We merged state-level minimum wage data with survey data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (2001-2019). Odd survey years included questions about hypertension. Separate difference-in-difference models estimated the odds of hypertension among Black and White adults in states with and without minimum wage increases. Difference-in-difference-in-difference models estimated the impact of minimum wage increases on hypertension among Black adults relative to White adults.

Results: As state wage limits increase, the odds of hypertension significantly decreased among Black adults overall. This relationship is largely driven by the impact of these policies on Black women. However, the Black-White disparity in hypertension worsened as state minimum wage limits increased, and the magnitude of this disparity was larger among women.

Conclusion: States having a minimum wage above the federal wage limit are not sufficient to combat structural racism and reduce the disparities in hypertension among Black adults. Rather, future research should explore livable wages as a policy lever to reduce disparities in hypertension among Black adults.

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提高州最低工资是减少高血压黑人和白人差异的潜在政策杠杆。
引言:黑人成年人承受着不成比例的高血压负担。收入不平等与高血压风险升高有关。提高最低工资已被探索作为一种潜在的政策杠杆,以解决高血压对这一人群的不同影响。然而,由于结构性种族主义和社会经济资源对健康影响的“收益减少”,这些增长可能对黑人成年人的健康没有重大影响。这项研究评估了州最低工资的提高与黑人和白人在高血压方面的差异之间的关系。方法:将国家级最低工资数据与行为危险因素监测系统(2001-2019)的调查数据合并。奇怪的调查年份包括有关高血压的问题。差异模型中的单独差异估计了在有和没有提高最低工资的州,黑人和白人成年人患高血压的几率。差异模型中的差异估计了黑人成年人与白人成年人相比,最低工资上涨对高血压的影响。结果:随着州工资限制的增加,黑人成年人患高血压的几率总体上显著降低。这种关系在很大程度上是由这些政策对黑人女性的影响所驱动的。然而,随着州最低工资限制的提高,黑人和白人在高血压方面的差距加剧,而且这种差距在女性中更大。结论:各州的最低工资高于联邦工资限制,不足以打击结构性种族主义,减少黑人成年人高血压的差异。相反,未来的研究应该探索宜居的工资作为减少黑人成年人高血压差异的政策杠杆。
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来源期刊
Health Equity
Health Equity Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
97
审稿时长
24 weeks
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