Trends in Physical and Mental Health, Mortality, Life Expectancy, and Social Inequalities Among American Indians and Alaska Natives, 1990-2019

Gopal K. Singh, Shanita D. Williams, Hyunju Lee, Elijah K. Martin, Michelle Allender, Christine T. Ramey
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Objective: To address the continuing gap in data and research on health and socioeconomic inequities characterizing Native Americans in the United States, this study examines major health and social inequality trends for the American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) populations covering several broad areas, including infant and child health, life expectancy and leading causes of death, physical and mental health, chronic disease prevalence, disability, health-risk behaviors, and health care access and quality. Methods: We used trend data from the 1990-2019 National Vital Statistics System, 2014-2018 National Health Interview Survey, and 2014-2018 American Community Survey to examine health, health care, mortality, and disease patterns for AIANs in relation to other racial/ethnic groups and the general population. Life tables, age-adjusted rates, risk ratios, and logistic regression were used to examine health inequalities. Results: In 2019, life expectancy of AIANs was 76.9 years, 11.3 years shorter than that for Asian/Pacific Islanders. The infant mortality rate for AIANs was 8.7 per 1,000 live births, 79% higher than the rate for non-Hispanic Whites. Risks of infant mortality from birth defects, low birthweight/prematurity, maternal complications, SIDS, and unintentional injury were significantly greater among AIANs compared with non Hispanic Whites. Excess mortality among AIANs, particularly in rural areas, was found for working ages, diabetes, liver cirrhosis, alcohol-related causes, youth suicide, and unintentional injuries. About 18% of AIANs assessed their overall health as fair or poor, at twice the rate of non-Hispanic Whites or the general population. About 10% of AIAN adults experienced serious psychological distress, 2-to-5 times higher than the prevalence for other racial/ethnic groups. AIANs had the highest overall disability, mental and ambulatory disability, health uninsurance, unemployment, and poverty rates in the US, with differences in these indicators varying markedly across the AIAN tribes. Conclusion and Implications for Translation: AIANs remain a disadvantaged segment of the US population in a number of key health indicators and in socioeconomic and living conditions, with poverty rates in some tribal groups approaching or exceeding 40%.
1990-2019年美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民的身心健康、死亡率、预期寿命和社会不平等趋势
摘要目的:为了解决关于美国印第安人特有的健康和社会经济不平等现象的数据和研究方面的持续差距,本研究审查了美国印第安人和阿拉斯加土著人口的主要健康和社会不平等趋势,涵盖几个广泛领域,包括婴儿和儿童健康、预期寿命和主要死亡原因、身心健康、慢性病患病率、残疾、健康风险行为、以及医疗服务的获取和质量。方法:我们使用1990-2019年国家生命统计系统、2014-2018年国家健康访谈调查和2014-2018年美国社区调查的趋势数据,检查aian与其他种族/民族群体和一般人群的健康、医疗保健、死亡率和疾病模式。使用生命表、年龄调整率、风险比和逻辑回归来检查健康不平等。结果:2019年,亚洲人的预期寿命为76.9岁,比亚太岛民短11.3岁。非洲裔美国人的婴儿死亡率为每1 000名活产8.7人,比非西班牙裔白人的婴儿死亡率高79%。与非西班牙裔白人相比,出生缺陷、低出生体重/早产、产妇并发症、小岛屿发展中国家(SIDS)和意外伤害导致的婴儿死亡风险在美国裔白人中明显更高。在亚洲裔美国人中,特别是在农村地区,工作年龄、糖尿病、肝硬化、与酒精有关的原因、青年自杀和意外伤害造成的死亡率过高。大约18%的美国人认为他们的整体健康状况一般或较差,是非西班牙裔白人或普通人群的两倍。大约10%的亚裔成年人经历过严重的心理困扰,比其他种族/族裔群体的患病率高2- 5倍。在美国,美国裔美国人的总体残疾率、精神残疾率和流动残疾率、无医疗保险率、失业率和贫困率最高,这些指标在美国裔美国人部落之间存在显著差异。结论和翻译意义:在一些关键的健康指标以及社会经济和生活条件方面,非洲裔美国人仍然是美国人口中的弱势群体,一些部落群体的贫困率接近或超过40%。
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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