A disaster's disparate impacts: analysing perceived stress and personal resilience across gender and race

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Clare E.B. Cannon, Regardt Ferreira, Fred Buttell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This research sought to identify differences in perceived stress and personal resilience across gender, race, and different types of stressors (such as rent or mortgage stress) among a sample of United States residents experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic. It used a cross-sectional, convenience sampling design for primary survey data collected over 10 weeks starting in April 2020 (n=374). Independent t-tests and binary logistic regression were performed to determine statistically significant differences between gender and race for perceived stress and personal resilience and to pinpoint key contributing factors. Results indicate women exhibited higher levels of stress, with non-IPV (intimate partner violence) reporting women evidencing higher levels of resilience than IPV reporting women. Racial minority women were more likely to experience nutritional stress, whereas White women were more likely to worry about rent or mortgage stress. These findings provide insight into disparate impacts across vulnerable populations at the start of a crisis with implications for improving pre- and post-disaster interventions.

灾难的不同影响:分析不同性别和种族的感知压力和个人恢复力
这项研究试图确定在经历新冠肺炎大流行的美国居民样本中,性别、种族和不同类型的压力源(如租金或抵押贷款压力)在感知压力和个人韧性方面的差异。它对从2020年4月开始的10周内收集的初步调查数据采用了横断面、方便抽样设计(n=374)。进行独立t检验和二元逻辑回归,以确定性别和种族之间在感知压力和个人韧性方面的统计学显著差异,并找出关键的促成因素。结果表明,女性表现出更高的压力水平,非IPV(亲密伴侣暴力)报告的女性表现出比IPV报告的女性更高的恢复力。少数种族女性更有可能经历营养压力,而白人女性更有可能担心房租或抵押贷款压力。这些发现深入了解了危机开始时对弱势群体的不同影响,并对改进灾前和灾后干预措施产生了影响。
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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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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