Interpersonal discrimination and health-related quality of life among black and white men and women in the United States
- 01-08-2013
- Brief Communication
- Auteurs
- Sherrill Sellers
- Dasha Cherepanav
- Janel Hanmer
- Dennis G. Fryback
- Mari Palta
- Gepubliceerd in
- Quality of Life Research | Uitgave 6/2013
Abstract
Objective
We assessed associations between discrimination and health-related quality of life among black and white men and women in the United States.
Methods
We examined data from the National Health Measurement Study, a nationally representative sample of 3,648 adults aged 35–89 in the non-institutionalized US population. These data include self-reported lifetime and everyday discrimination as well as several health utility indexes (EQ-5D, HUI3, and SF-6D). Multiple regression was used to compute mean health utility scores adjusted for age, income, education, and chronic diseases for each race-by-gender subgroup.
Results
Black men and women reported more discrimination compared to white men and women. Health utility tended to be worse as reported discrimination increased. With a few exceptions, differences between mean health utility scores in the lowest and highest discrimination groups exceeded the 0.03 difference generally considered to be a clinically significant difference.
Conclusions
Persons who experienced discrimination tended to score lower on health utility measures. The study also revealed a complex relationship between experiences of discrimination and race and gender. Because of these differential social and demographic relationships caution is urged when interpreting self-rated health measures in research, clinical, and policy settings.
- Titel
- Interpersonal discrimination and health-related quality of life among black and white men and women in the United States
- Auteurs
-
Sherrill Sellers
Dasha Cherepanav
Janel Hanmer
Dennis G. Fryback
Mari Palta
- Publicatiedatum
- 01-08-2013
- Uitgeverij
- Springer Netherlands
- Gepubliceerd in
-
Quality of Life Research / Uitgave 6/2013
Print ISSN: 0962-9343
Elektronisch ISSN: 1573-2649 - DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-012-0258-8
Deze inhoud is alleen zichtbaar als je bent ingelogd en de juiste rechten hebt.