Inequities in routine preventive care utilization among persons with overweight/obesity in the United States: An analysis of nativity, racial and ethnic identity, and socioeconomic status

Biplab Kumar Datta , Steven S. Coughlin , Ban Majeed
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Abstract

Extant literature documented various health disparities among immigrants and racial and ethnically marginalized individuals in the United States. However, health disparities in the intersection of nativity and race are generally less visited. This cross-sectional study assessed utilization of routine preventive care among adults with overweight/obesity at the junction of their nativity, racial/ethnic identity, and socioeconomic status (i.e., income and education). Pooling data on 120,184 adults with overweight/obesity from the 2013–2018 waves of the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), we estimated modified Poisson regressions with robust standard errors to obtain adjusted prevalence rates of preventive care visit, receiving flu shot, and having blood pressure, cholesterol and blood glucose screened. We found that immigrant adults with overweight/obesity had lower rates of utilization of all five preventive care services. However, these patterns varied by racial and ethnic sub-populations. While White immigrants had comparable rates of cholesterol and blood glucose screening, they had 2.7%, 2.9%, and 14.5% lower rates of preventive care visit, blood pressure screening, and getting a flu shot respectively, compared to native-born Whites. These patterns were similar for Asian immigrants as well. Black immigrants, on the other hand, had comparable rates of getting a flu shot and blood glucose screening, and had 5.2%, 4.9%, and 4.9% lower rates of preventive care visit, blood pressure screening, and cholesterol screening respectively. Lastly, the rates of utilization among Hispanic immigrants were significantly lower (ranging from 9.2% to 20%) than those of their native-born counterparts for all five preventive care services. These rates further varied by education, income, and length of stay in the US, within the racial and ethnic sub-groups. Our findings thus suggest a complex relationship between nativity and racial/ethnic identity in relation to preventive care utilization among adults with overweight/obesity.

美国超重/肥胖人群常规预防保健利用的不公平:出生、种族和民族认同和社会经济地位的分析
现存文献记录了美国移民以及种族和族裔边缘化个体之间的各种健康差异。然而,出生地和种族交叉处的健康差异通常很少出现。这项横断面研究评估了超重/肥胖成年人在出生、种族/民族认同和社会经济地位(即收入和教育)方面对常规预防性护理的利用情况。我们汇集了2013-2018年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)中120184名超重/肥胖成年人的数据,估计了具有稳健标准误差的修正泊松回归,以获得预防性护理就诊、接种流感疫苗以及筛查血压、胆固醇和血糖的调整后患病率。我们发现,超重/肥胖的移民成年人使用所有五种预防性护理服务的比率较低。然而,这些模式因种族和族裔亚群体而异。虽然白人移民的胆固醇和血糖筛查率相当,但与本地出生的白人相比,他们的预防性护理就诊率、血压筛查率和流感疫苗接种率分别低2.7%、2.9%和14.5%。亚洲移民的这种模式也很相似。另一方面,黑人移民接种流感疫苗和血糖筛查的比率相当,预防性护理就诊、血压筛查和胆固醇筛查的比率分别降低5.2%、4.9%和4.9%。最后,西班牙裔移民在所有五项预防性护理服务中的使用率(从9.2%到20%不等)明显低于本地出生的移民。这些比率还因教育、收入和在美国停留的时间长短而有所不同,在种族和族裔亚群体中也有所不同。因此,我们的研究结果表明,在超重/肥胖成年人中,出生和种族/民族认同与预防性护理利用之间存在复杂的关系。
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来源期刊
Dialogues in health
Dialogues in health Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
0.70
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134 days
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