Health Disparity and Structural Violence: How Fear Undermines Health Among Immigrants at Risk for Diabetes.

Janet Page-Reeves, Joshua Niforatos, Shiraz Mishra, Lidia Regino, Andrew Gingrich, Robert Bulten
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Abstract

Diabetes is a national health problem, and the burden of the disease and its consequences particularly affect Hispanics. While social determinants of health models have improved our conceptualization of how certain contexts and environments influence an individual's ability to make healthy choices, a structural violence framework transcends traditional uni-dimensional analysis. Thus, a structural violence approach is capable of revealing dynamics of social practices that operate across multiple dimensions of people's lives in ways that may not immediately appear related to health. Working with a Hispanic immigrant community in Albuquerque, New Mexico, we demonstrate how structural forces simultaneously directly inhibit access to appropriate healthcare services and create fear among immigrants, acting to further undermine health and nurture disparity. Although fear is not normally directly associated with diabetes health outcomes, in the community where we conducted this study participant narratives discussed fear and health as interconnected.

健康差距和结构性暴力:恐惧如何损害糖尿病风险移民的健康。
糖尿病是一个全国性的健康问题,这种疾病的负担及其后果尤其影响到西班牙裔。虽然健康模式的社会决定因素改善了我们对某些背景和环境如何影响个人做出健康选择的能力的概念化,但结构性暴力框架超越了传统的单向度分析。因此,结构性暴力方法能够揭示社会实践的动态,这些实践在人们生活的多个方面发挥作用,其方式可能不会立即与健康有关。我们与新墨西哥州阿尔伯克基的一个西班牙裔移民社区合作,展示了结构性力量如何同时直接阻碍移民获得适当的医疗保健服务,并在移民中制造恐惧,从而进一步破坏健康并助长差距。虽然恐惧通常与糖尿病的健康结果没有直接关系,但在我们进行这项研究的社区中,参与者的叙述讨论了恐惧和健康是相互关联的。
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