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Discrimination and Multimorbidity Among Black Americans: Findings from the National Survey of American Life

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Objectives There is a notable lack of research on the risk factors for multimorbidity, which has become more common over recent decades. Black Americans experience discrimination more often than their… Click to show full abstract

Objectives There is a notable lack of research on the risk factors for multimorbidity, which has become more common over recent decades. Black Americans experience discrimination more often than their White counterparts, and also have significantly higher prevalence of multimorbidity. This paper examines the associations between discrimination and multimorbidity among Black Americans. Methods We analyzed data from the National Survey of American Life to calculate the prevalence of two types of discrimination (everyday discrimination, major discriminatory events) and multimorbidity (physical, psychiatric, mixed, any). Using multivariable logistic regression, we examined the associations between discrimination and multimorbidity, adjusting for age, sex, years of education, income-to-poverty ratio, and ethnicity. The everyday discrimination scale was discretized into five categories (none, low, medium, high, very high), but was also treated as a continuous variable. The major discriminatory events were analyzed in separate adjusted models, and as a count of events. Results When compared with those who did not experience any discrimination, people who experienced everyday discrimination were significantly more likely to report all types of multimorbidity in a dose-response fashion at a conventional level of statistical significance. Most major discriminatory events were associated with greater odds of reporting all types of multimorbidity, as were the counts of major discriminatory events, in a dose-response fashion. Conclusions We found strong evidence to suggest that discrimination was associated with greater odds of reporting multimorbidity. Future studies can expand on these findings using longitudinal data to capture the relations between discrimination and health over time, or by testing preventive interventions that allay the damaging health effects of discrimination.

Keywords: multimorbidity; discrimination multimorbidity; multimorbidity among; black americans; among black; discrimination

Journal Title: Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities
Year Published: 2020

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