Literature DB >> 18463971

"It's the skin you're in": African-American women talk about their experiences of racism. an exploratory study to develop measures of racism for birth outcome studies.

Amani Nuru-Jeter1, Tyan Parker Dominguez, Wizdom Powell Hammond, Janxin Leu, Marilyn Skaff, Susan Egerter, Camara P Jones, Paula Braveman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Stress due to experiences of racism could contribute to African-American women's adverse birth outcomes, but systematic efforts to measure relevant experiences among childbearing women have been limited. We explored the racism experiences of childbearing African-American women to inform subsequent development of improved measures for birth outcomes research.
METHODS: Six focus groups were conducted with a total of 40 socioeconomically diverse African-American women of childbearing age in four northern California cities.
RESULTS: Women reported experiencing racism (1) throughout the lifecourse, with childhood experiences seeming particularly salient and to have especially enduring effects (2) directly and vicariously, particularly in relation to their children; (3) in interpersonal, institutional, and internalized forms; (4) across different life domains; (5) with active and passive responses; and (6) with pervasive vigilance, anticipating threats to themselves and their children.
CONCLUSIONS: This exploratory study's findings support the need for measures reflecting the complexity of childbearing African-American women's racism experiences. In addition to discrete, interpersonal experiences across multiple domains and active/passive responses, which have been measured, birth outcomes research should also measure women's childhood experiences and their potentially enduring impact, perceptions of institutionalized racism and internalized negative stereotypes, vicarious experiences related to their children, vigilance in anticipating future racism events, as well as the pervasiveness and chronicity of racism exposure, all of which could be sources of ongoing stress with potentially serious implications for birth outcomes. Measures of racism addressing these issues should be developed and formally tested.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18463971      PMCID: PMC3051354          DOI: 10.1007/s10995-008-0357-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Matern Child Health J        ISSN: 1092-7875


  57 in total

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2.  Prejudice as stress: conceptual and measurement problems.

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3.  Racial identity, racial discrimination, perceived stress, and psychological distress among African American young adults.

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5.  Psychosocial factors and preterm birth among African American and White women in central North Carolina.

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8.  Maternal support in the delivery room and birthweight among African-American women.

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Review 9.  Racial disparity in infant and maternal mortality: confluence of infection, and microvascular dysfunction.

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10.  The association between adverse childhood experiences and adolescent pregnancy, long-term psychosocial consequences, and fetal death.

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  88 in total

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4.  Cumulative Stress and Cortisol Disruption among Black and Hispanic Pregnant Women in an Urban Cohort.

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5.  Differential associations between everyday versus institution-specific racial discrimination, self-reported health, and allostatic load among black women: implications for clinical assessment and epidemiologic studies.

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6.  Expectations of Racism and Carotid Intima-Media Thickness in African American Women.

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Review 7.  The social determinants of health: it's time to consider the causes of the causes.

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Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2014 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.792

8.  Testing the Association Between Traditional and Novel Indicators of County-Level Structural Racism and Birth Outcomes among Black and White Women.

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9.  Racial discrimination, educational attainment, and biological dysregulation among midlife African American women.

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10.  Investigating the Relationship between Perceived Discrimination, Social Status, and Mental Health.

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