keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38580766/epigenetic-responses-to-nonchemical-stressors-potential-molecular-links-to-perinatal-health-outcomes
#21
REVIEW
Lauren A Eaves, Cailee E Harrington, Rebecca C Fry
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We summarize the recent literature investigating exposure to four nonchemical stressors (financial stress, racism, psychosocial stress, and trauma) and DNA methylation, miRNA expression, and mRNA expression. We also highlight the relationships between these epigenetic changes and six critical perinatal outcomes (preterm birth, low birth weight, preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, childhood allergic disease, and childhood neurocognition). RECENT FINDINGS: Multiple studies have found financial stress, psychosocial stress, and trauma to be associated with DNA methylation and/or miRNA and mRNA expression...
April 6, 2024: Current Environmental Health Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38575385/-this-might-be-clich%C3%A3-but-it-was-a-sense-of-family-gang-involvement-among-indigenous-young-adults-and-their-search-for-attachment-community-and-hope
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Seeley Foster, Jana Grekul
Indigenous communities in Canada continue to feel the ongoing impacts of colonialism, including socio-economic disadvantage, high rates of violent victimization, systemic racism and discrimination, overrepresentation in the criminal justice system, and intergenerational trauma. Based on in-depth interviews with 10 gang-involved Indigenous young adults, using attachment theory as a guiding framework, we explore how colonialism continues to negatively impact the attachment these young people have to their families, communities, and social institutions, and leads to their gang involvement which perpetuates violence and trauma...
April 4, 2024: Canadian Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38574165/aoa-critical-issues-symposium-promoting-health-equity
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Keith Kenter, Karen Bovid, E Brooke Baker, Eric Carson, Deana Mercer
Promoting equitable health care is to ensure that everyone has access to high-quality medical services and appropriate treatment options. The definition of health equity often can be misinterpreted, and there are challenges in fully understanding the disparities and costs of health care and when measuring the outcomes of treatment. However, these topics play an important role in promoting health equity. The COVID-19 pandemic has made us more aware of profound health-care disparities and systemic racism, which, in turn, has prompted many academic medical centers and health-care systems to increase their efforts surrounding diversity, equity, and inclusion...
April 4, 2024: Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. American Volume
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573711/facing-discomfort-avoided-negative-affect-shapes-the-acknowledgment-of-systemic-racism
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kara Murray, Birgit Koopmann-Holm
Why can some Americans acknowledge the deeply rooted racism in the United States while others cannot? Past research suggests that the more people want to avoid feeling negative ("avoided negative affect; ANA"), the less likely they focus on and even perceive someone's suffering. Because acknowledging racism is one specific instance of noticing and acknowledging that people are suffering, the present research investigates whether ANA might also affect the degree to which people acknowledge racism. We predicted that the more people want to avoid feeling negative, the less they will acknowledge systemic racism and the more they will deny negative aspects of their country's history and current policies, that is, the more blindly patriotic they will be...
April 4, 2024: Emotion
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573649/addressing-systemic-racism-and-racialized-violence-to-reduce-firearm-injury-and-mortality-inequities
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Schenita D Randolph, Rosa M Gonzalez-Guarda, Jay Pearson
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 5, 2024: JAMA health forum
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38567694/examining-and-mitigating-racism-in-nursing-using-the-socio-ecological-model
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iheduru-Anderson Kechi, Roberta Waite, Teri A Murray
Racism in nursing is multifaceted, ranging from internalized racism and interpersonal racism to institutional and systemic (or structural) elements that perpetuate inequities in the nursing profession. Employing the socio-ecological model, this study dissects the underlying challenges across various levels and proposes targeted mitigation strategies to foster an inclusive and equitable environment for nursing education. It advances clear, context-specific mitigation strategies to cultivate inclusivity and equity within nursing education...
April 3, 2024: Nursing Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38567535/risk-of-recurrent-stroke-and-mortality-among-black-and-white-patients-with-poststroke-depression
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jack Gomberg, Laura K Stein, Mandip S Dhamoon
BACKGROUND: Poststroke depression (PSD) is a treatable and common complication of stroke that is underdiagnosed and undertreated in minority populations. We compared outcomes of Black and White patients with PSD in the United States to assess whether race is independently associated with the risk of recurrent stroke and mortality. METHODS: We used deidentified Medicare data from inpatient, outpatient, and subacute nursing facilities for Black and White US patients from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2019, to perform this retrospective cohort analysis...
April 3, 2024: Stroke; a Journal of Cerebral Circulation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38566939/editorial-power-discrimination-and-privilege-in-individuals-and-institutions
#28
EDITORIAL
Sonya C Faber, Monnica T Williams, Matthew D Skinta
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565857/fostering-inclusion-in-eeg-measures-of-pediatric-brain-activity
#29
REVIEW
Eryn J Adams, Molly E Scott, Melina Amarante, Chanel A Ramírez, Stephanie J Rowley, Kimberly G Noble, Sonya V Troller-Renfree
The past two decades have seen a rapid increase in neuroscientific evidence being used to characterize how contextual, structural, and societal factors shape cognition and school readiness. Measures of functional brain activity are increasingly viewed as markers of child development and biomarkers that could be employed to track the impact of interventions. While electroencephalography (EEG) provides a promising tool to understand educational inequities, traditional EEG data acquisition is commonly limited in some racial and ethnic groups due to hair types and styles...
April 2, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558148/adopt-a-classroom-program-a-potential-platform-to-address-the-root-of-health-disparities-in-the-us
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wai Hong Kevin Lo, Cato T Laurencin
The underrepresentation of Black doctors is a significant issue in the US that led to the perpetuation of health disparities in the African American community. Racial and ethnic minorities in the US have been shown to have higher rates of chronic diseases, such as hypertension, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, as well as higher rates of obesity and premature death compared to White people. While Blacks make up more than 13% of the US population, they comprise only 4% of US doctors and less than 7% of medical students...
April 1, 2024: Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557339/breaking-barriers-a-psychobiography-of-siya-kolisi-from-a-sociocultural-perspective
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tinashe Harry
Siyamthanda (Siya) Kolisi OIG (1992-) is the first black captain of the South African rugby team (Springboks) in its 128 years of existence. The Springboks have long been associated with Afrikaner people and a history of racism. Siya had to navigate a tumultuous upbringing in an environment characterised by various issues such as socioeconomic inequalities, high unemployment among Black people, and lack of resources. Siya was purposively selected for this study as he has become one of the most influential individuals in South Africa...
2024: International Review of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552532/disparate-benefits-of-higher-childhood-socioeconomic-status-on-cognition-in-young-adulthood-by-intersectional-social-positions
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Addam Reynolds, Emily A Greenfield, Lenna Nepomnyaschy
OBJECTIVES: Emerging evidence supports the protective effects of higher childhood socioeconomic status (cSES) on cognition over the life course. However, less understood is if higher cSES confers benefits equally across intersecting social positions. Guided by a situational intersectionality perspective and the theory of Minority Diminished Returns (MDR), this study examined the extent to which associations between cSES and cognition in young adulthood are jointly moderated by racialized identity and region of childhood residence...
March 24, 2024: Advances in Life Course Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38551624/-protectourelders-analysis-of-tweets-about-older-asian-americans-and-anti-asian-sentiments-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Reuben Ng, Nicole Indran
BACKGROUND: A silver lining to the COVID-19 pandemic is that it cast a spotlight on a long-underserved group. The barrage of attacks against older Asian Americans during the crisis galvanized society into assisting them in various ways. On Twitter, now known as X, support for them coalesced around the hashtag #ProtectOurElders. To date, discourse surrounding older Asian Americans has escaped the attention of gerontologists-a gap we seek to fill. Our study serves as a reflection of the level of support that has been extended to older Asian Americans, even as it provides timely insights that will ultimately advance equity for them...
March 29, 2024: Journal of Medical Internet Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547809/structural-gendered-racism-and-preterm-birth-inequities-in-the-united-states
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taylor Riley, Daniel A Enquobahrie, Lisa S Callegari, Anjum Hajat
Structural gendered racism - the "totality of interconnectedness between structural racism and sexism" - is conceptualized as a fundamental cause of the persistent preterm birth inequities experienced by Black and Indigenous people in the United States. Our objective was to develop a state-level latent class measure of structural gendered racism and examine its association with preterm birth among all singleton live births in the US in 2019. Using previously-validated inequity indicators between White men and Black women across 9 domains (education, employment, poverty, homeownership, health insurance, segregation, voting, political representation, incarceration), we conducted a latent profile analysis to identify a latent categorical variable with k number of classes that have similar values on the observed continuous input variables...
March 21, 2024: Social Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38546945/structural-racism-related-state-laws-and-healthcare-access-among-black-latine-and-white-u-s-adults
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dougie Zubizarreta, Ariel L Beccia, Jarvis T Chen, Jaquelyn L Jahn, S Bryn Austin, Madina Agénor
Racialized healthcare inequities in the USA remain glaring, yet root causes are understudied. To address this gap, we created a state-level structural racism legal index (SRLI) using the Structural Racism-Related State Law Database and analyzed its association with racialized inequities in four outcomes (lacking health insurance coverage, lacking a personal doctor, avoiding care due to cost, lacking a routine check-up) from the 2013 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (N = 454,834). To obtain predicted probabilities by SRLI quartiles (Q1 = less structural racism, Q4 = more structural racism) and racialized group, we fit survey-weighted multilevel logistic models adjusted for individual- and state-level covariates...
March 28, 2024: Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38546558/necessary-burdensome-or-threatening-awareness-of-black-white-disparities-in-health-care-access-and-self-rated-health-for-black-and-white-americans
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vanessa V Volpe, Courtney S Thomas Tobin, Donte L Bernard, Perusi B Muhigaba, Julia M Ross
Awareness of racial health care inequities is one prerequisite to eliminating them. Although extant research has described awareness of racial health care inequities in the United States, the health impacts of such awareness on communities that are most impacted by these inequities remains unknown. Therefore, we examined associations between awareness of Black-White racial health care inequities and self-rated health for Black and White adults in the United States. We used survey data from non-Hispanic Black and White participants ( N = 6,449) who responded to the national American Health Values Survey (2015-2016) to test associations between awareness of Black-White inequities in health care and self-rated health...
March 28, 2024: American Journal of Orthopsychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38545749/moving-beyond-ignorance-and-epistemic-violence-indigenous-health-nurses-response-to-systems-transformation
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Meste'si Llucmetkwe, Colleen Seymour, Mona Lisa Bourque Bearskin, Liquaa Wazni, Rose Melnyk, Nikki Rose Hunter Porter, Michelle Padley
Health inequity among Indigenous populations continues to widen despite advances in Indigenous health research. Under Canada's esteemed universal healthcare system, Indigenous populations continue to experience much poorer health outcomes due to the intersectional legacies of colonialism and racism. In this commentary, we reflect on structural, systemic and service delivery racism at all levels of care, which are deeply embedded in historical, political, institutional and socioeconomic policies and practices that continue to perpetuate harm and genocide of Indigenous Peoples...
January 2024: Nursing Leadership
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38545744/big-challenges-meet-big-leadership-in-2024
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ruth Martin-Misener
As we begin the year 2024, we do so with some very big challenges that have spilled over from 2023 and, indeed, many years before that. Every day, we are confronted with concerning experiential and research-based evidence about worsening access to healthcare, pervasive racism and widening disparities. Clearly, there is a great deal of work to be done in our healthcare system to support and improve the health of the diverse populations that we serve. Yet, along with the challenges come opportunities to reflect, collaborate, innovate, evaluate and learn...
January 2024: Nursing Leadership
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38544727/racial-and-ethnic-disparities-in-psychological-care-for-individuals-with-fasd-a-dis-ability-studies-and-critical-race-theory-perspective-toward-improving-prevention-assessment-diagnosis-and-intervention
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Madeline N Rockhold, Blake A Gimbel, Alesia A Richardson, Carson Kautz-Turnbull, Emily L Speybroeck, Erik de Water, Julianne Myers, Emily Hargrove, Maggie May, Samia S Abdi, Christie L M Petrenko
Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) are among the most common neurodevelopmental disorders and substantially impact public health. FASD can affect people of all races and ethnicities; however, there are important racial and ethnic disparities in alcohol-exposed pregnancy prevention, assessment and diagnosis of FASD, and interventions to support individuals with FASD and their families. In this article we use the Dis/Ability Studies and Critical Race Theory (Dis/Crit) framework to structure the exploration of disparities and possible solutions within these three areas (prevention, diagnosis, intervention)...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38544411/on-the-role-of-police-shootings-recognition-of-systemic-racism-and-empathy-on-white-americans-support-for-police-reform
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diane-Jo Bart-Plange, Sophie Trawalter
The police kill Black Americans at disproportionate rates. Despite this, White Americans remain mixed on support for policing-related policy reform. We examined whether bearing witness to police violence leads to support for policy reforms. Across three studies ( N = 943), White participants either viewed a news video about an unarmed Black man killed at the hands of police or in a car accident due to a collision with another driver. Participants lower but not higher in symbolic racism reported more empathy after viewing a police shooting (vs...
March 27, 2024: Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin
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