在 COVID-19 大流行期间,医疗不信任对少数民族青少年预防行为和决策的影响。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-08-02 DOI:10.1007/s40615-024-02118-6
Gregory Phillips, Jiayi Xu, Alfred Cortez, Michael G Curtis, Caleb Curry, Megan M Ruprecht, Shahin Davoudpour
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:医疗不信任(MM)被认为是评估医疗需求和解决健康差异的一个障碍;然而,只有有限的文献侧重于评估弱势群体的医疗不信任,尤其是少数种族/族裔和性/性别少数群体的青年和年轻成年人(YYA):2021 年 2 月至 2022 年 3 月期间,我们在美国及其属地开展了青年和年轻成人 COVID-19 研究,这是一项针对 14 至 24 岁少数族裔青年和年轻成人(n = 1027)的前瞻性队列研究。该研究通过付费社交媒体广告、与为边缘化青少年提供服务的组织开展外联活动以及现有登记册相结合的方式招募参与者,目标人群为少数种族和少数民族以及 LGBTQ + 青年,以开展 COVID-19 健康行为研究。研究人员建立了多个多项式逻辑回归模型,以检验人口统计学与 MM 三个维度(包括医疗保健经验、政府信息和科学信息)之间的关联:大多数参与者的年龄在 18 至 21 岁之间(48.3%),被认定为西班牙裔(33.3%)或白人(22.5%),以及双性恋或泛性者(34.3%)。与异性恋同龄人相比,同性恋青年报告个人医疗保健经历较差的几率更高。报告对医生信息来源有一定程度或极度信任的男同性恋/女同性恋青少年的几率是异性恋青少年的两倍。除了那些被认定为亚裔的青少年外,少数种族/族裔青少年对疾病预防控制中心的一般信息或其 COVID-19 数据表示 "有点信任 "或 "非常信任 "的几率低于白人青少年。变性和性别不同的青少年受 COVID-19 危险性统计数据影响的可能性是顺性别青少年的两倍多:我们的研究表明,将边缘化身份纳入对医疗不信任的评估非常重要,这样才能更好地了解青少年的健康预防和治疗行为,并制定公共卫生预防和治疗策略,尤其是针对少数群体。
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Influence of Medical Mistrust on Prevention Behavior and Decision-Making Among Minoritized Youth and Young Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Background: Medical mistrust (MM) is seen as a barrier to assessing healthcare needs and addressing health disparities; however, limited literature has focused on assessing MM for vulnerable populations, especially racial/ethnic minority and sexual/gender minority youth and young adults (YYA).

Methods: Between February 2021 and March 2022, we conducted the Youth and Young Adults COVID-19 Study, a prospective cohort of minoritized YYA aged 14 to 24 years (n = 1027), within the United States and its territories. Participants were recruited through a combination of paid social media ads, outreach with organizations serving marginalized youth, and an existing registry, targeting racial and ethnic minority and LGBTQ + youth for a study on COVID-19 health behaviors. Multiple multinomial logistic regression models were developed to examine associations between demographics and three dimensions of MM including healthcare experience, government information, and scientific information.

Results: Most participants were between the ages of 18 and 21 years (48.3%), identified as Hispanic (33.3%) or white (22.5%), and bisexual or pansexual (34.3%). Queer YYA had higher odds of reporting worse personal healthcare experiences than their straight peers. The odds of gay/lesbian YYA that reported somewhat or extreme trust in doctor's sources were two times higher than their straight peers. Except for those who identified as Asian, racial/ethnic minority YYA were less likely to report somewhat or extreme trust in the CDC's general information or its COVID-19 data than white YYA. Transgender and gender diverse YYA were more than twice as likely to report being very or extremely influenced by statistics of the dangers of COVID-19 than cisgender YYA.

Conclusions: Our study indicated the importance of incorporating marginalized identities into the assessment of medical mistrust to better understand YYA's health prevention and treatment behaviors and to develop public health prevention and treatment strategies, especially for minoritized communities.

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