职业隔离与高血压不公平:反向危害法对医疗工作者的影响》。

Journal of economics, race, and policy Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-03-22 DOI:10.1007/s41996-022-00098-5
Tongtan Chantarat, Eva A Enns, Rachel R Hardeman, Patricia M McGovern, Samuel L Myers, Janette Dill
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国,黑人--尤其是黑人女性--医疗保健工作者更有可能从事工作要求高、工作控制力低、上司或同事支持有限的职业,而且与白人同行相比更容易失业。这些与工作相关的因素增加了罹患高血压的风险。本研究探讨了职业隔离在多大程度上解释了医疗保健劳动力中持续存在的高血压种族不平等现象,以及劳动力隔离政策对健康的潜在影响。我们模拟了美国医疗保健劳动力的四个职业类别:健康诊断专业人员(即地位最高者)、健康治疗专业人员、医疗保健技术人员和医疗保健助理(即地位最低者)。我们根据美国社区调查数据估算出的种族和性别概率,将 25 岁的工人分配到不同的职业类别,以此模拟职业隔离。我们的模型利用职业等级属性和工人的健康行为来预测 40 年职业生涯中的高血压。我们跟踪了模拟工人在维持现状(职业隔离)和消除职业隔离的实验条件下的高血压患病率和黑白患病率差距。我们发现,在实验条件下,黑人与白人的高血压患病率差距比维持现状条件下缩小了约一个百分点。这些发现表明,旨在消除医疗保健劳动力隔离的政策可能会减少这一人群中的种族健康不平等。我们的微观模拟可用于未来的研究,以比较各种消除种族隔离的政策,因为它们可能会对工人的健康产生不同的影响:在线版本包含补充材料,可查阅 10.1007/s41996-022-00098-5。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Occupational Segregation And Hypertension Inequity: The Implication Of The Inverse Hazard Law Among Healthcare Workers.

Occupational Segregation And Hypertension Inequity: The Implication Of The Inverse Hazard Law Among Healthcare Workers.

Occupational Segregation And Hypertension Inequity: The Implication Of The Inverse Hazard Law Among Healthcare Workers.

Occupational Segregation And Hypertension Inequity: The Implication Of The Inverse Hazard Law Among Healthcare Workers.

In the United States (US), Black-particularly Black female-healthcare workers are more likely to hold occupations with high job demand, low job control with limited support from supervisors or coworkers and are more vulnerable to job loss than their white counterparts. These work-related factors increase the risk of hypertension. This study examines the extent to which occupational segregation explains the persistent racial inequity in hypertension in the healthcare workforce and the potential health impact of workforce desegregation policies. We simulated a US healthcare workforce with four occupational classes: health diagnosing professionals (i.e., highest status), health treating professionals, healthcare technicians, and healthcare aides (i.e., lowest status). We simulated occupational segregation by allocating 25-year-old workers to occupational classes with the race- and gender-specific probabilities estimated from the American Community Survey data. Our model used occupational class attributes and workers' health behaviors to predict hypertension over a 40-year career. We tracked the hypertension prevalence and the Black-white prevalence gap among the simulated workers under the staus quo condition (occupational segregation) and the experimental conditions in which occupational segregation was eliminated. We found that the Black-white hypertension prevalence gap became approximately one percentage point smaller in the experimental than in the status quo conditions. These findings suggest that policies designed to desegregate the healthcare workforce may reduce racial health inequities in this population. Our microsimulation may be used in future research to compare various desegregation policies as they may affect workers' health differently.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41996-022-00098-5.

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