Health status of White Americans

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

ethnicity or racial category.[5] In conjunction with these psychiatric issues, the population presents higher rates of alcohol usage alongside lower levels of psychological flourishing.[2][6] Given this information, the health status of white Americans has gained increasing importance due to the differences in health outcomes between white Americans and white people from other parts of the world.[citation needed
]

Health advantages

2007, the 15 leading causes of death in the US were recorded with a specific attention toward racial/ethnic health disparities. For 10 of those 15 causes of death, black Americans had higher rates of death.[7]

The following list describes the categories in which non-Hispanic whites have ranked comparatively better than blacks[8][9][10] (in order of total deaths[7]):

  1. Heart disease
  2. Cancer
  3. Stroke
  4. Diabetes
  5. Respiratory infections
  6. Kidney disease
  7. Sepsis
  8. Hypertension
  9. Homicide

They also fare better for:

Life expectancy

Life expectancy can be used to gauge the overall health of a population and is defined as the average number of years a group of infants would live if they were to experience the age-specific death rates that are present in their birth year.[11] White Americans have historically exhibited an advantage over large portions of the US population. From 1980 to 2014, white Americans had the longest life expectancy,[11] black people had the shortest life expectancy in the US, and black men had higher racial differences in life expectancy than black women.[12] These patterns can be identified throughout early childhood until advanced age when the differences become less severe. The differences seen in life expectancy are generally attributed to minority populations having earlier onsets of illness, greater severity of disease, and poorer survival rates.[12]

In recent years, white Americans have collectively experienced a consistently declining life expectancy. In particular, this trend is prevalent among non-college educated whites and is largely related to the

deaths of despair phenomenon.[13] After 1998, other first-world countries' mortality rates began to fall by 2% a year, which matched the average rate of decline seen in the US from 1978 to 1998. However, non-Hispanic whites' mortality increased by 0.5%.[13] These changes are specific to the age category within midlife.[citation needed
]

Diseases of despair

In the US, there is a classification of behavior-related medical conditions known as

drug or alcohol overdose, suicide, and alcoholic liver disease. The frequency of these illnesses is highest among middle-age working class white people.[14] Scholars have raised the idea that diseases of despair are the result of worsening psychosocial problems that extend from the 1980s and are of concern to the US as a whole.[15] Although these behaviors are thought to be seen with groups who experience lack of social and economic mobility, there are increasing risk factors involved with poor mental health. A study published in 2009 found black individuals to have higher rates of psychological flourishing than white individuals.[6] Despite the vastly different economic trends for white and black Americans, whites are more likely to perceive themselves as having lower social class and are less optimistic about their financial future.[16] This trend among middle-class whites points to an increased need for research on the health status of whites due to continuing rise in premature death caused by these diseases.[17]
Further, this trend exemplifies the problematic nature of research using whites as a comparative standard to other ethnic and racial backgrounds in the US.

Opioid epidemic

From 2010 and into the 2020s, there has been an increase in opioid overdoses among white Americans, specifically in rural areas.[18] Although this epidemic is not limited to white Americans, the increase in overdose deaths, emergency room visits related to opioid usage, and treatment for opioid addictions is well documented to be overwhelmingly white.[19] Andrew Kolodny, director of the Opioid Policy Research Collaborative at Brandeis University, attributes the disparate opioid usage among white Americans to physicians' increased propensity towards prescribing narcotics to white patients. Rhetoric from the War on Drugs has led to the persistent misperception that black and Hispanic individuals are more likely to use and become addicted to drugs.[18]

Effects of racialization

Structural racism is a system composed of a unequal power dynamics that allows members of the dominating social group to obtain unearned societal privilege through ideology and behavior without intention or dislike of the non-dominant group.[3][20] Due to the racialized environment that people experience in the US, scholars have studied whether living in areas where there are high levels of racialization will negatively impact the health of individuals living there. Pathways that link racialization to poor health outcomes include economic injustice and social deprivation, environmental and occupational health inequalities, psychosocial trauma, inadequate health care, state-sanctioned violence, alienation from property, and political exclusion.[21][20] While it has been understood that racism and prejudice negatively affect the health of the individuals who are being discriminated against, there is reason to believe that simply living in an area with racial disparities and tension can be harmful regardless of the person's race or beliefs.[4] US states that had higher levels of "collective disrespect" toward black people had higher age-adjusted mortality rates for both black and white people.[22] A study in the American Journal of Public Health identified higher risks of mortality associated with being male, advanced age, lower socioeconomic status, race, and being divorced or widowed. However, when community-level prejudice was added into this model, higher levels of anti-black prejudice increased the odds of participant mortality by as much as 31%.[4] The study found that the highest level of mortality risk was associated with individuals with lower attitudes of racial prejudice who lived in areas of higher community-level prejudice.[4] Consequently, community-level racial prejudice is a stronger predictor of mortality than socioeconomic status or racial residential segregation.

In a study of Hurricane Katrina survivors, researchers measured the relationship between perception of racism against black Americans among both white and black Americans, and similarly found that perceptions of racism against black Americans were associated with negative mental health outcomes for whites.[23] Measuring levels of racial prejudice and racial attitudes is complicated, however, given the different ways prejudice is presented and the implicit bias in an individual's self-evaluation.

Psychiatrist Jonathan Metzl's 2019 book Dying of Whiteness explores the effects of living in areas with high levels of racial resentment and prejudice. The book notes the hypocrisy of white people adopting political views that negatively affect the health outcomes of white Americans.[24] For example, Metzl found that through an anti-government rhetoric, whites tended to reject the Affordable Care Act expansion, oppose adoption of stricter gun laws, and resist tax cuts intended to build infrastructure in areas concentrated with working-class white populations.[25] His ethnographic research for the book suggests that the politics of racial resentment creates sentiments about government that would ultimately harm life expectancy in a variety of ways for white individuals. The book notes the trend in the lack of acknowledgement among white individuals of macro-level social determinants of health due to a focus on individual effort.[26] This nostalgic idea of hard-work and self-sufficiency negates the impacts of larger health factors and further creates an environment that he believes is not conducive to positive health outcomes.

Comparison to other white populations

Compared to other white populations, white Americans are at disparate risk of poor health outcomes partly due to the incidence of diseases of despair. The life expectancy of whites in the US ranks behind countries such as South Korea, Chile, Greece, Cyprus, and Cuba.[27][2] In addition, when comparing the health of white Americans to white people from other first world countries, there are better health outcomes for all ages up to 75.[28][clarification needed] Furthermore, whites from the highest socioeconomic levels in the US had comparable health outcome rates to whites from England who had the lowest income and education levels.[29] Malat et al. developed a framework in 2016 that aims to understand the relationship between whiteness and health.[2] In a study of health disparities across Canada and the US, the US consistently had far more pronounced racial health inequities.[30][31] The extent of these inequities are heavily dependent on the society in which they are occur.[31] These researchers describe the US as being characterized by racial and ethnic segregation, and policies that distribute health resources, housing, and education unequally.  

Below is a list of conditions for which the US overall is consistently worse than the average among comparable high-income countries (Australia, Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom):[27]

  • Adverse birth outcomes
  • Injuries and homicides
  • Adolescent pregnancy and STIs
  • HIV and AIDS
  • Obesity and diabetes
  • Heart disease
  • Chronic lung disease
  • Disability

See also

References

  1. ^ Daniels, J; Schulz, A .J. (2006). "Constructing whiteness in health disparities research". Health and Illness at the Intersections of Gender, Race, and Class. Jossey-Bass Publishing: 89–127 – via Academic Works.
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  8. ^ Russell, Lesley (2010-12-16). "Fact Sheet: Health Disparities by Race and Ethnicity". Center for American Progress. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  9. ^ "FastStats". www.cdc.gov. 2021-04-14. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
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  19. ^ King, Noel; Kolodny, Andrew (November 4, 2017). "Why Is The Opioid Epidemic Overwhelmingly White?". National Public Radio.
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