Locher Julie L, Ritchie Christine S, Roth David L, Baker Patricia Sawyer, Bodner Eric V, Allman Richard M
Department of Medicine, Division of Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 219 Community Health Services Building, 933 19th Street South, Birmingham, AL 35294-2041, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2005 Feb;60(4):747-61. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.06.023.
This study examines the relationships that exist between social isolation, support, and capital and nutritional risk in older black and white women and men. The paper reports on 1000 community-dwelling older adults aged 65 and older enrolled in the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Study of Aging, a longitudinal observational study of mobility among older black and white participants in the USA. Black women were at greatest nutritional risk; and black women and men were the groups most likely to be socially isolated and to possess the least amounts of social support and social capital. For all ethnic-gender groups, greater restriction in independent life-space (an indicator of social isolation) was associated with increased nutritional risk. For black women and white men, not having adequate transportation (also an indicator of social isolation) was associated with increased nutritional risk. Additionally, for black and white women and white men, lower income was associated with increased nutritional risk. For white women only, the perception of a low level of social support was associated with increased nutritional risk. For black men, not being married (an indicator of social support) and not attending religious services regularly, restricting activities for fear of being attacked, and perceived discrimination (indicators of social capital) were associated with increased nutritional risk. Black females had the greatest risk of poor nutritional health, however more indicators of social isolation, support, and capital were associated with nutritional risk for black men. Additionally, the indicators of social support and capital adversely affecting nutritional risk for black men differed from those associated with nutritional risk in other ethnic-gender groups. This research has implications for nutritional policies directed towards older adults.
本研究考察了美国65岁及以上社区居住的老年黑人和白人女性及男性中,社会隔离、支持、资本与营养风险之间的关系。本文报告了参与阿拉巴马大学伯明翰分校(UAB)衰老研究的1000名65岁及以上社区居住老年人的情况,该研究是一项针对美国老年黑人和白人参与者流动性的纵向观察研究。黑人女性面临的营养风险最大;黑人女性和男性是最有可能处于社会隔离状态、拥有最少社会支持和社会资本的群体。对于所有种族 - 性别群体,独立生活空间的更大限制(社会隔离的一个指标)与营养风险增加相关。对于黑人女性和白人男性,没有足够的交通工具(也是社会隔离的一个指标)与营养风险增加相关。此外,对于黑人和白人女性以及白人男性,低收入与营养风险增加相关。仅对于白人女性,对低水平社会支持的感知与营养风险增加相关。对于黑人男性,未婚(社会支持的一个指标)、不经常参加宗教活动、因害怕被攻击而限制活动以及感知到的歧视(社会资本的指标)与营养风险增加相关。黑人女性营养健康状况不佳的风险最大,然而,更多社会隔离——支持和资本指标与黑人男性的营养风险相关。此外,对黑人男性营养风险产生不利影响的社会支持和资本指标与其他种族 - 性别群体营养风险相关指标不同。本研究对针对老年人的营养政策具有启示意义。