Taking action to advance the study of race and ethnicity: the Women's Health Initiative (WHI).

Lorena Garcia, Shawna Follis, Cynthia A Thomson, Khadijah Breathett, Crystal Wiley Cené, Monik Jimenez, Charles Kooperberg, Kamal Masaki, Electra D Paskett, Mary Pettinger, Aaron Aragaki, Peggye Dilworth-Anderson, Marcia L Stefanick
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

"Race" and "ethnicity" are socially constructed terms, not based on biology - in contrast to biologic ancestry and genetic admixture - and are flexible, contested, and unstable concepts, often driven by power. Although individuals may self-identify with a given race and ethnic group, as multidimensional beings exposed to differential life influencing factors that contribute to disease risk, additional social determinants of health (SDOH) should be explored to understand the relationship of race or ethnicity to health. Potential health effects of structural racism, defined as "the structures, policies, practices, and norms resulting in differential access to goods, services, and opportunities of society by "race," have been largely ignored in medical research. The Women's Health Initiative (WHI) was expected to enroll a racially and ethnically diverse cohort of older women at 40 U.S. clinical centers between 1993 and 1998; yet, key information on the racial and ethnic make-up of the WHI cohort of 161,808 women was limited until a 2020-2021 Task Force was charged by the WHI Steering Committee to better characterize the WHI cohort and develop recommendations for WHI investigators who want to include "race" and/or "ethnicity" in papers and presentations. As the lessons learned are of relevance to most cohorts, the essence of the WHI Race and Ethnicity Language and Data Interpretation Guide is presented in this paper. Recommendations from the WHI Race and Ethnicity Language and Data Interpretation Guide include: Studies should be designed to include all populations and researchers should actively, purposefully and with cultural-relevance, commit to recruiting a diverse sample; Researchers should collect robust data on race, ethnicity and SDOH variables that may intersect with participant identities, such as immigration status, country of origin, acculturation, current residence and neighborhood, religion; Authors should use appropriate terminology, based on a participant's self-identified "race" and "ethnicity", and provide clear rationale, including a conceptual framework, for including race and ethnicity in the analytic plan; Researchers should employ appropriate analytical methods, including mixed-methods, to study the relationship of these sociocultural variables to health; Authors should address how representative study participants are of the population to which results might apply, such as by age, race and ethnicity.

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采取行动促进对种族和族裔的研究:妇女健康倡议。
“种族”和“民族”是社会建构的术语,而不是基于生物学——与生物血统和基因混合相反——是灵活的、有争议的和不稳定的概念,通常由权力驱动。虽然个人可能自我认同于某一特定种族和族裔群体,但作为接触到导致疾病风险的不同生活影响因素的多维个体,应该探索更多的健康社会决定因素,以了解种族或族裔与健康的关系。结构性种族主义的潜在健康影响,定义为“结构、政策、实践和规范导致不同种族获得商品、服务和社会机会的差异”,在医学研究中基本上被忽视了。妇女健康倡议(WHI)预计将招募一个种族和民族多样化的40岁美国老年妇女队列1993年到1998年的临床中心;然而,关于161,808名妇女的WHI队列的种族和民族构成的关键信息是有限的,直到WHI指导委员会成立了一个2020-2021年工作组,以更好地表征WHI队列,并为希望在论文和报告中包含“种族”和/或“民族”的WHI调查员提出建议。由于所获得的经验教训与大多数队列相关,因此本文介绍了WHI种族和民族语言和数据解释指南的实质。WHI种族和民族语言和数据解释指南的建议包括:研究应设计为包括所有人群,研究人员应积极,有目的地和与文化相关,致力于招募多样化的样本;研究人员应收集有关种族、民族和SDOH变量的可靠数据,这些变量可能与参与者身份相交,如移民身份、原籍国、文化适应、当前居住地和社区、宗教;作者应根据参与者自我认定的“种族”和“民族”使用适当的术语,并提供明确的理由,包括概念框架,将种族和民族纳入分析计划;研究人员应采用适当的分析方法,包括混合方法,来研究这些社会文化变量与健康的关系;作者应该说明研究参与者在结果可能适用的人群中的代表性,例如按年龄、种族和民族。
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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