Division of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago.
College of Social Work, Ohio State University.
Behav Med. 2020 Jul-Sep;46(3-4):189-201. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2020.1729086.
Hopefulness is associated with better health and may be integral for stress adaptation and resilience. Limited research has prospectively examined whether hopefulness protects against physiological dysregulation or does so similarly for U.S. whites, blacks and Hispanics. We examined the association between baseline hopefulness and future allostatic load using data from the Health and Retirement Study (n = 8,486) and assessed differences in this association by race/ethnicity and experiences of discrimination. Four items measured hopefulness and allostatic load was a count of seven biomarkers for which a respondent's measured value was considered high-risk for disease. A dichotomous variable assessed whether respondents experienced at least one major act of discrimination in their lifetime. We used Poisson regression to examine the association between hopefulness and allostatic load and included a multiplicative interaction term to test racial/ethnic differences in this association. Subsequent analyses were stratified by race/ethnicity and tested the interaction between hopefulness and discrimination within each racial/ethnic group. Hopefulness was associated with lower allostatic load scores, but its effects varied significantly by race/ethnicity. Race-stratified analyses suggested that hopefulness was protective among whites and not associated with allostatic load among Hispanics irrespective of experiencing discrimination. Hopefulness was associated with lower allostatic load among blacks reporting discrimination but associated with higher allostatic load among those who did not. Findings suggest that hopefulness plays differing roles for older whites, blacks and Hispanics and, for blacks, its protective effects on physiological dysregulation are intricately tied to their experiences of discrimination.
希望与更好的健康相关,可能对压力适应和韧性至关重要。有限的研究前瞻性地检查了希望是否能预防生理失调,或者对美国白种人、黑人和西班牙裔人是否有同样的作用。我们使用健康与退休研究(Health and Retirement Study)的数据,考察了基线希望与未来的全身适应不良负荷(allostatic load)之间的关联,并评估了种族/民族和歧视经历对这种关联的差异。四项指标衡量希望,全身适应不良负荷是七种生物标志物的计数,其中一名受访者的测量值被认为存在疾病高风险。一个二分变量评估受访者一生中是否经历过至少一次重大歧视行为。我们使用泊松回归来检验希望与全身适应不良负荷之间的关联,并包含一个乘法交互项来检验这种关联的种族/民族差异。随后的分析按种族/民族分层,并检验了每个种族/民族群体中希望与歧视之间的交互作用。希望与较低的全身适应不良负荷评分相关,但它的作用因种族/民族而异。种族分层分析表明,希望对白人有保护作用,而对西班牙裔人则与全身适应不良负荷无关,无论他们是否经历过歧视。希望与报告歧视的黑人的较低全身适应不良负荷相关,但与没有报告歧视的黑人的较高全身适应不良负荷相关。研究结果表明,希望对老年白种人、黑人和西班牙裔人起着不同的作用,对黑人来说,它对生理失调的保护作用与他们的歧视经历密切相关。