压迫的长臂:对边缘化社区的结构性耻辱如何使群体内的健康差距永久化。

Uchechi A Mitchell, Akemi Nishida, Faith E Fletcher, Yamilé Molina
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引用次数: 14

摘要

理解和解决卫生不平等问题需要从理论上和经验上加强对多种形式的耻辱及其对边缘化社区卫生行为和卫生结果的影响的关注。虽然最近的学术研究强调了结构性耻辱感对群体间健康差异的作用,但现有文献尚未阐明结构性耻辱感导致群体内健康差异的机制。在这篇文章中,我们回顾并使用相关文献来告知一个概念模型的发展,该模型概述了由于其社会地位和身份而被边缘化的社区如何通过制造分裂和紧张来促进群体内的健康差异。我们特别关注(1)白人至上导致的有色人种社区,(2)父权制和异性恋导致的性别和性少数群体社区,以及(3)残疾歧视导致的残疾社区之间的差异。我们认为,被污名化的社区成员所面临的污名化的性质和程度与被污名化的特征对其他人的可见程度密切相关。所谓可见性,我们指的是那些更容易被他人感知并揭示一个人的社会身份的特征(例如,种族/民族、出生、关系状况、性别表达和残疾状况)。本文通过讨论该模型对未来研究、实践和政策的影响来推进文献,包括承认结构性污名故意破坏社区集体认同和团结并因此威胁到卫生公平的方式的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Long Arm of Oppression: How Structural Stigma Against Marginalized Communities Perpetuates Within-Group Health Disparities.

Understanding and addressing health inequities calls for enhanced theoretical and empirical attention to multiple forms of stigma and its influence on health behaviors and health outcomes within marginalized communities. While recent scholarship highlights the role of structural stigma on between-group health disparities, the extant literature has yet to elucidate the mechanisms through which structural stigma gives rise to within-group health disparities. In this article, we review and use relevant literature to inform the development of a conceptual model outlining how structural stigma contributes to within-group health disparities by creating division and tension within communities marginalized due to their social statuses and identities. We specifically focus on disparities among (1) communities of color due to White supremacy, (2) gender and sexual minority communities due to patriarchy and heterosexism, and (3) the disability community due to ableism. We argue that the nature and extent of the stigma members of stigmatized communities face are intricately tied to how visible the stigmatized characteristic is to others. By visibility, we refer to characteristics that are more easily perceived by others, and reveal a person's social identity (e.g., race/ethnicity, nativity, relationship status, gender expression, and disability status). This paper advances the literature by discussing the implications of the model for future research, practice, and policy, including the importance of acknowledging the ways in which structural stigma intentionally disrupts the collective identity and solidarity of communities and consequently threatens health equity.

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