非裔美国人健康、吸烟与刑事司法接触的关系

Pamela Valera, R. Taylor, L. Chatters
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要介绍。本研究考察了自评身体和口腔健康、吸烟和刑事司法接触史(即从未被捕;被捕,但从未入狱;或被关押在改造学校、拘留所、监狱或监狱)。方法。我们对2001-2003年美国生活全国调查中的非裔美国人子样本(n = 3570)进行了描述性统计、线性回归和多项回归分析。结果。总体而言,非洲裔美国女性的被捕率和监禁史都低于非洲裔美国男性。此外,我们发现刑事司法接触与男性和女性较低的自我评价身体健康和口腔健康以及较高的吸烟率有关。被逮捕和关押在监狱以外设施的非裔美国妇女比男性有更多的慢性健康问题。此外,被逮捕或在改造学校、拘留中心、监狱或监狱度过一段时间的非裔美国人成为当前吸烟者的几率显著增加。最后,在非裔美国妇女中,与那些没有刑事司法史的妇女相比,那些有任何程度的刑事司法接触的妇女很可能是现在的吸烟者或曾经的吸烟者。结论。通过刑事司法接触解决非洲裔美国人的健康问题,是缩小健康差距和改善非洲裔美国人男女整体健康和福祉的关键一步。此外,注意性别差异和刑事司法接触的具体类型对于更准确地了解这些关系非常重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Relationship Between Health, Cigarette Smoking and Criminal Justice Contact among African Americans
Abstract Introduction. This study examined the association between self-rated physical and oral health, cigarette smoking, and history of criminal justice contact (i.e., never arrested; arrested, but never incarcerated; or incarcerated in reform school, detention, jail, or prison) among African American men and women. Methods. We conducted descriptive statistical, linear regression, and multinomial regression analyses of the African American subsample (n = 3,570) from the National Survey of American Life (2001–2003). Results. Overall, African American women reported lower arrest rates and histories of incarceration than African American men. Additionally, we found that criminal justice contact was associated with lower self-rated physical health and oral health and higher levels of smoking for both men and women. African American women who had been arrested and detained in facilities other than jail had more chronic health problems than their male counterparts. Furthermore, having been arrested or spent time in a reform school, detention center, jail, or prison significantly increased the odds of African American men being a current smoker. Lastly, among African American women, those who had any level of criminal justice contact were likely to be current smokers and former smokers compared to those without a history of criminal justice contact. Conclusion. Addressing the health of African Americans with criminal justice contact is a critical step in reducing health disparities and improving the overall health and well-being of African American men and women. Furthermore, attention to differences by gender and specific types of criminal justice contact are important for a more precise understanding of these relationships.
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