安全网初级保健中酒精使用的预测因素:阶级歧视、宗教信仰和种族。

Journal of Addiction Pub Date : 2020-06-16 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1155/2020/5916318
Michael A Trujillo, Erin R Smith, Sarah Griffin, Allison B Williams, Paul B Perrin, Bruce Rybarczyk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

基于阶级的歧视可能会影响低收入人群的饮酒问题,这可能会被个人的宗教信仰所缓冲。然而,人们对种族如何影响这种联系知之甚少。本研究的目的是检验阶级歧视对问题饮酒影响的种族差异,并确定阶级歧视对种族问题饮酒是否有条件的直接影响。在这项横断面研究中,参与者(N = 189)是城市安全网初级保健诊所的患者,他们完成了评估基于阶级的歧视经历、对上帝的态度和酒精使用的问卷调查。数据收集于2015年至2016年,并使用Hayes PROCESS宏进行分析。阶级歧视对问题饮酒有显著的主效应。双向互动分析确定了种族互动对上帝的显著安慰,白人对上帝的更大安慰与饮酒问题较少有关,而黑人则没有。条件直接效应表明,在黑人参与者中,基于阶级的歧视经历与低、中等但不高程度的酗酒问题有关,而在白人参与者中则没有观察到这一点。这项研究提供了个人宗教信仰、基于阶级的歧视和种族如何交织在一起,形成主要是低收入城市患者的酒精使用问题的见解。临床医生对风险和保护因素的认识,以及种族如何缓和这些因素的影响,对于为这一人群提供更好的护理至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Predictors of Alcohol Use in Safety-Net Primary Care: Classism, Religiosity, and Race.

Predictors of Alcohol Use in Safety-Net Primary Care: Classism, Religiosity, and Race.

Predictors of Alcohol Use in Safety-Net Primary Care: Classism, Religiosity, and Race.

Class-based discrimination may impact problematic drinking in low-income populations, which may be buffered by personal religiosity. However, little is known how race may impact this association. The purpose of this study was to examine racial differences in the effect of class-based discrimination on problematic drinking as moderated by comfort with God and determine if there were conditional direct effects of class-based discrimination on problematic drinking by race. In this cross-sectional study, participants (N = 189) were patients of an urban, safety-net primary care clinic who completed questionnaires assessing experiences of class-based discrimination, attitudes toward God, and alcohol use. Data were collected from 2015 to 2016 and analyzed using the Hayes PROCESS macro. There was a significant main effect for class-based discrimination predicting problematic drinking. Two-way interaction analyses identified a significant comfort with God by race interaction with greater comfort with God associated with less problematic drinking among white but not black respondents. Conditional direct effects showed that experiences of class-based discrimination were associated with problematic drinking at low and moderate but not high levels of comfort with God in black participants, whereas none were observed for white participants. This study provides insight on how personal religiosity, class-based discrimination, and race may intertwine to shape problematic alcohol use in primarily low-income, urban patients. Clinicians' awareness of risk and protective factors, as well as how race tempers the effects of such factors, is vital in providing better care for this population.

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