种族和教育程度对24年中老年美国人就诊的综合影响

Shervin Assari
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引用次数: 10

摘要

背景:关于少数民族收益递减(mdr)的文献表明,少数种族和族裔群体成员的健康状况比预期的要差,尤其是黑人。从理论上讲,这种影响部分是由于在受过高等教育的种族和少数民族中,教育程度对预防保健和疾病管理的影响较弱。目的:本研究探讨了美国中老年人群中,基线受教育程度对坚持常规就诊的影响的种族和民族差异。方法:前瞻性研究,随访24年。健康与退休研究(HRS: 1992-2016)包括10880名中老年人,他们是西班牙裔、非西班牙裔、黑人或白人。自变量是受教育程度。因变量是遵医嘱(%)。年龄、性别、婚姻状况、收入、健康行为(吸烟和饮酒)和健康(抑郁、自评健康和慢性病)是协变量。种族和民族是主要的调节因素。采用线性回归进行数据分析。结果:总体而言,在随访过程中,除去所有混杂因素,较高的教育程度与较高的遵医率相关。种族在统计上与受教育程度有显著的相互作用,这表明黑人中老年患者的受教育程度对坚持常规就诊的影响要小于白人。在西班牙裔和非西班牙裔中老年人的比较中没有发现类似的相互作用。结论:教育程度与白人比黑人中老年预防和疾病管理医生就诊的增加有关。这是一个错失的改善受过高等教育的中老年人健康的机会。不是种族/民族或阶级塑造了健康行为,而是种族/民族和阶级塑造了人们的健康行为。至少部分种族健康差异不是由于社会经济地位低,而是由于社会经济地位的降低。
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Combined Effects of Race and Educational Attainment on Physician Visits Over 24 Years in a National Sample of Middle-Aged and Older Americans.

Background: The literature on Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) have shown worse than expected health of the members of racial and ethnic minority groups particularly Blacks. Theoretically, this effect can be in part due to weaker effects of educational attainment on preventive care and disease management in highly educated racial and ethnic minorities.

Objectives: The current study explored the racial and ethnic differences in the effect of baseline educational attainment on % adherance to the routine physician visits among middle-aged and older adults in the US.

Methods: This is a prospective study with 24 years of follow up. The Health and Retirement Study (HRS: 1992-2016) included 10 880 middle-aged and older adults who were Hispanic, non-Hispanic, Black or White. The independent variable was educational attainment. The dependent variable was adherance to the routine physician visits (%). Age, gender, marital status, income, health behaviors (smoking and drinking) and health (depression, self-rated health, and chronic diseases) were the covariates. Race and ethnicity were the focal moderators. Linear regression was used for data analysis.

Results: Overall, higher educational attainment was associated with higher % of adherance to the routine physician visits over the course of follow-up, net of all confounders. Race showed a significant statistical interaction with educational attainment suggesting of a smaller effect of high education attainment on % adherance to the routine physician visits for Black than White middle-aged and older adults. A similar interaction could not be found for the comparison of Hispanic and non-Hispanic middle-aged and older adults.

Conclusion: Educational attainment is associated with a larger increase in preventive and disease management doctor visits for White than Black middle-aged and older adults. This is a missed opportunity to improve the health of highly educated middle-aged and older adults. It is not race/ethnicity or class that shapes health behaviors but race/ethnicity and class that shape people's pro-health behaviors. At least some of the racial health disparities is not due to low SES but diminished returns of SES.

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审稿时长
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