Relationship Between Athletic Trainer Access, Socioeconomic Status, and Race and Ethnicity in United States Secondary Schools.

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
Matthew J Rivera, Adrienne Willis, Omar Ramos, Justin P Young, Eliza W Barter, Eric G Post, Lindsey E Eberman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Context: Authors of extensive research have exposed health care disparities regarding socioeconomic status (SES) and race and ethnicity demographics. Previous researchers have shown significant differences in access to athletic training services (athletic trainer [AT] access) in the secondary school setting based on SES, but with limited samples.

Objective: To investigate differences in AT access based on race and ethnicity and SES on a national scale.

Design: Cross-sectional study.

Setting: Database study using secondary analysis. Data were collected from the National Center for Education Statistics, Athletic Training Location and Services database, and US Census Bureau.

Patients or other participants: A total of 10 983 public schools.

Main outcome measure(s): Descriptive data were summarized by measures of central tendency. A 1-way analysis of variance determined differences between school characteristics (median household income, percentage of students eligible for free and reduced lunch, percentage of White students, and percentage of non-White students) based on AT access: full-time (FT-AT), part-time (PT-AT), and no AT (no-AT). A Bonferroni pairwise comparison was used for variables with significant main effects.

Results: Across all schools included in the study, 43.8% had no-AT (n = 4812), 23.5% had PT-AT access (n = 2581), and 32.7% had FT-AT access (n = 3590). Significant effects were found between AT access and median household income (P < .001), the percentage of students eligible for free and reduced lunch (P < .001), the percentage of White students (P < .001), and the percentage of non-White students (P < .001). Schools with FT-AT access had a higher SES than PT-AT and no-AT schools. Significant differences existed between AT access groups and the race and ethnicity of schools. Schools with FT-AT access had a significantly lower percentage of non-White students (31.3%) than schools with no-AT (46.0%; P < .001). No significant differences between FT-AT and PT-AT access based on race and ethnicity demographics presented (P ≥ .13).

Conclusions: Schools with higher SES had greater AT access, whereas schools with a higher percentage of non-White students were more likely to have no AT access, demonstrating the disparities in health care extends to athletic health care as well. To increase AT access, future initiatives should address the inequities where larger minority populations and counties of lower SES exist.

美国中学中运动训练员的使用情况、社会经济地位以及种族和民族之间的关系。
背景:大量研究揭示了社会经济地位(SES)和种族/民族人口统计方面的医疗保健差异。以往的研究表明,在中学环境中,基于社会经济地位的运动训练服务(AT access)的获得存在明显差异,但样本有限:本研究在全国范围内调查了基于种族/民族和社会经济地位的运动训练服务获得情况的差异:设计:横断面研究:数据库研究,采用二次分析。数据收集自国家教育统计中心(NCES)、运动训练地点和服务(ATLAS)数据库以及美国人口普查局:10,983 所公立学校:描述性数据通过中心倾向测量进行总结。单因素方差分析确定了学校特征之间的差异:家庭收入中位数(MHI)、符合免费和减免午餐条件的学生百分比(%FRL)、白人学生百分比和非白人学生百分比:全日制(FT-AT)、非全日制(PT-AT)和无运动训练员(no-AT)。对主效应显著的变量采用 Bonferroni 配对比较法:在所有参与研究的学校中,43.8%的学校没有运动训练员(人数=4,812),23.5%的学校有兼职运动训练员(人数=2,581),32.7%的学校有全职运动训练员(人数=3,590)。获取学习辅助器具与 MHI 之间存在显着影响(p 结论:社会经济地位越高的学校,获取学习辅助器具的比例越高:社会经济地位较高的学校有更多的学生可以使用自动取物设备;而非白人学生比例较高的学校则更有可能没有自动取物设备,这表明医疗保健方面的差异也延伸到了体育医疗保健方面。为了增加获取辅助器具的机会,未来的举措应解决少数民族人口较多和社会经济地位较低的县域存在的不平等问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Athletic Training
Journal of Athletic Training 医学-运动科学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
6.10%
发文量
106
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The mission of the Journal of Athletic Training is to enhance communication among professionals interested in the quality of health care for the physically active through education and research in prevention, evaluation, management and rehabilitation of injuries. The Journal of Athletic Training offers research you can use in daily practice. It keeps you abreast of scientific advancements that ultimately define professional standards of care - something you can''t be without if you''re responsible for the well-being of patients.
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