密歇根州底特律地区阿拉伯裔美国人社区哮喘患病率和严重程度

Mary Johnson, Jerome Nriagu, Adnan Hammad, Kathryn Savoie, Hikmet Jamil
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引用次数: 24

摘要

移民人口提供了一个独特的文化和环境风险因素与哮喘病因的交集。本研究的重点是北美最大的阿拉伯裔美国人移民接收区底特律地铁的600个阿拉伯裔美国人家庭的哮喘患病率和严重程度。该调查方法引入了许多新特征:(a)哮喘关键环境风险因素的排名方案用于推导每个家庭的综合环境风险指数(ERI),以及(b)基于症状频率和强度的哮喘严重程度的综合测量。研究发现,环境风险因素和社会经济地位(SES)的替代指标比哮喘严重程度更能预测哮喘流行程度,而人口统计学变量如英语流利程度和美国出生比哮喘流行程度更能预测哮喘严重程度。这些结果表明,在本研究涉及的社区中,社会经济地位变量可能更能反映环境暴露,而美国的英语流利程度和出生可能与影响哮喘管理的医疗保健获取和利用行为有关。我们还发现哮喘患病率与文化适应程度之间存在显著关系。与新移民和适应良好的移民相比,中等程度移民的哮喘患病率最高,这表明在底特律地区的阿拉伯裔美国人中,随着人口适应程度的提高,与新移民身份相关的风险因素被“西方”风险因素所取代。
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Asthma prevalence and severity in Arab American communities in the Detroit area, Michigan.

Immigrant populations provide a unique intersection of cultural and environmental risk factors implicated in asthma etiology. This study focuses on asthma prevalence and severity in 600 Arab American households in metro Detroit, the largest immigrant reception zone for Arab Americans in North America. The survey method introduced a number of novel features: (a) a ranking scheme for the key environmental risk factors for asthma was used to derive an aggregated environmental risk index (ERI) for each household, and (b) an aggregate measure of asthma severity based on symptom frequency and intensity. Environmental risk factors and surrogates for socioeconomic status (SES) were found to be stronger predictors of asthma prevalence than asthma severity, while demographic variables such as English fluency and birth in the United States were better predictors of asthma severity than asthma prevalence. These results suggest that SES variables may be more reflective of environmental exposures in communities involved in this study, while English fluency and birth in the United States may be linked to health care access and utilization behavior that can influence the asthma management. We also found a significant relationship between asthma prevalence and degree of acculturation. Asthma prevalence was highest among moderately acculturated immigrants compared with new immigrants and those who were well acculturated, suggesting that among Arab Americans in the Detroit area, risk factors associated with new immigrant status are replaced by "western" risk factors as the population becomes more acculturated.

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