The impact of cumulative trauma on health service utilization practices of Black immigrant women.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES
Jennifer J Lee, Bushra Sabri, Nicole E Warren, Ginger Hanson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Factors that influence health service utilization among Black immigrant women with experiences of trauma are not well understood. An improved understanding of the impact of cumulative trauma on Black immigrant women's health care utilization is critical to increase access to health services for this population.

Methods: Using baseline data of 147 Black immigrant women from an existing NICHD-funded study, hierarchical multiple linear regression was used to assess the impact of length of stay in the US, education, cumulative trauma frequency, everyday discrimination, and the interaction of discrimination and cumulative trauma on health service utilization. A model-building approach was used to determine covariates to include in the final model.

Results: Cumulative trauma frequency was positively associated with health service usage (b = 0.02; p = 0.026). Compared to Black immigrant women who had lived in the US for longer than 10 years, those who had lived in the US between 1 and 4 years were less likely to use health services (b = -0.89; CI: -1.67, -0.11). Black immigrant women with bachelor's degrees were less likely to use health services compared to Black immigrant women with post-graduate degrees (b = -0.85; CI: -1.61, -0.09). The interaction of cumulative trauma and discrimination was also significantly associated with the behavior of utilizing health services (b = 0.002; CI: 0.0003, 0.004). Those who experienced higher perceived levels of discrimination and high cumulative trauma levels were more likely to use health services compared to those with lower levels of discrimination and high levels of cumulative trauma.

Conclusion: Cumulative trauma experiences were positively correlated with health service utilization, and discrimination strengthened this relationship. Future work must examine long-term data for patterns of seeking health services over time, explore specific types of health services associated with cumulative trauma experiences, and study associations between health service usage and health outcomes.

累积创伤对黑人移民妇女保健服务利用的影响。
背景:影响有创伤经历的黑人移民妇女卫生服务利用的因素尚不清楚。更好地了解累积创伤对黑人移民妇女保健利用的影响对于增加这一人口获得保健服务的机会至关重要。方法:利用现有nic赫德资助研究的147名黑人移民妇女的基线数据,采用分层多元线性回归评估在美停留时间、教育程度、累积创伤频率、日常歧视以及歧视与累积创伤的相互作用对卫生服务利用的影响。采用模型构建方法确定纳入最终模型的协变量。结果:累积创伤频率与卫生服务使用呈正相关(b = 0.02;p = 0.026)。与在美国居住超过10年的黑人移民妇女相比,在美国居住1至4年的妇女使用医疗服务的可能性较小(b = -0.89;Ci: -1.67, -0.11)。与拥有研究生学位的黑人移民妇女相比,拥有学士学位的黑人移民妇女使用医疗服务的可能性更低(b = -0.85;Ci: -1.61, -0.09)。累积创伤和歧视的相互作用也与利用卫生服务的行为显著相关(b = 0.002;Ci: 0.0003, 0.004)。与歧视程度较低和累积创伤程度较高的人相比,那些遭受较高程度歧视和较高程度累积创伤的人更有可能使用卫生服务。结论:累积创伤经历与卫生服务利用呈正相关,歧视强化了这一关系。未来的工作必须检查长期数据,以了解随时间推移寻求卫生服务的模式,探索与累积创伤经历相关的特定类型的卫生服务,并研究卫生服务使用与健康结果之间的关系。
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来源期刊
Ethnicity & Health
Ethnicity & Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethnicity & Health is an international academic journal designed to meet the world-wide interest in the health of ethnic groups. It embraces original papers from the full range of disciplines concerned with investigating the relationship between ’ethnicity’ and ’health’ (including medicine and nursing, public health, epidemiology, social sciences, population sciences, and statistics). The journal also covers issues of culture, religion, gender, class, migration, lifestyle and racism, in so far as they relate to health and its anthropological and social aspects.
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