Cheng Tina L, Goodman Elizabeth
Pediatrics. 2015 Jan;135(1):e225-37. doi: 10.1542/peds.2014-3109.
An extensive literature documents the existence of pervasive and persistent child health, development, and health care disparities by race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status (SES). Disparities experienced during childhood can result in a wide variety of health and health care outcomes, including adult morbidity and mortality, indicating that it is crucial to examine the influence of disparities across the life course. Studies often collect data on the race, ethnicity, and SES of research participants to be used as covariates or explanatory factors. In the past, these variables have often been assumed to exert their effects through individual or genetically determined biologic mechanisms. However, it is now widely accepted that these variables have important social dimensions that influence health. SES, a multidimensional construct, interacts with and confounds analyses of race and ethnicity. Because SES, race, and ethnicity are often difficult to measure accurately, leading to the potential for misattribution of causality, thoughtful consideration should be given to appropriate measurement, analysis, and interpretation of such factors. Scientists who study child and adolescent health and development should understand the multiple measures used to assess race, ethnicity, and SES, including their validity and shortcomings and potential confounding of race and ethnicity with SES. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that research on eliminating health and health care disparities related to race, ethnicity, and SES be a priority. Data on race, ethnicity, and SES should be collected in research on child health to improve their definitions and increase understanding of how these factors and their complex interrelationships affect child health. Furthermore, the AAP believes that researchers should consider both biological and social mechanisms of action of race, ethnicity, and SES as they relate to the aims and hypothesis of the specific area of investigation. It is important to measure these variables, but it is not sufficient to use these variables alone as explanatory for differences in disease, morbidity, and outcomes without attention to the social and biologic influences they have on health throughout the life course. The AAP recommends more research, both in the United States and internationally, on measures of race, ethnicity, and SES and how these complex constructs affect health care and health outcomes throughout the life course.
大量文献记载了儿童健康、发育及医疗保健方面因种族、族裔和社会经济地位(SES)而存在的普遍且持续的差异。儿童时期经历的差异可能导致各种各样的健康及医疗保健结果,包括成人的发病率和死亡率,这表明审视整个生命历程中差异的影响至关重要。研究通常会收集研究参与者的种族、族裔和SES数据,用作协变量或解释因素。过去,这些变量常常被认为是通过个体或基因决定的生物学机制发挥作用。然而,现在人们普遍认为这些变量具有影响健康的重要社会层面。SES是一个多维度概念,与种族和族裔分析相互作用并造成混淆。由于SES、种族和族裔往往难以准确测量,可能导致因果关系的错误归因,因此应慎重考虑对此类因素进行适当的测量、分析和解读。研究儿童和青少年健康与发育的科学家应了解用于评估种族、族裔和SES的多种测量方法,包括其有效性、缺点以及种族和族裔与SES之间的潜在混淆。美国儿科学会(AAP)建议,消除与种族、族裔和SES相关的健康及医疗保健差异的研究应作为优先事项。在儿童健康研究中应收集种族、族裔和SES数据,以完善其定义,并增进对这些因素及其复杂相互关系如何影响儿童健康的理解。此外,AAP认为研究人员在研究特定领域的目标和假设时,应考虑种族、族裔和SES的生物学及社会作用机制。测量这些变量很重要,但仅将这些变量用作疾病、发病率和结果差异的解释因素而不关注它们在整个生命历程中对健康的社会和生物学影响是不够的。AAP建议在美国国内和国际上开展更多关于种族、族裔和SES测量方法以及这些复杂概念如何影响整个生命历程中的医疗保健和健康结果的研究。