Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11023422 | Social Science & Medicine | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
We provide novel evidence of decreased glucocorticoid sensitivity at increasing frequency of exposure to racial discrimination. Our findings suggest that the biology of preterm birth may depend upon racial discriminatory exposures, favoring pathways dependent upon glucocorticoid-induced increases in leukocyte tissue surveillance versus glucocorticoid resistance-associated inflammatory aberrations at increasing levels of exposure. Precision approaches to prenatal care are sorely needed to combat preterm birth, particularly among African American women, with efforts dependent upon further research examining the pathways contributing to the syndrome dependent upon the totality of an individual's exposures.
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Authors
Shannon L. Gillespie, Cindy M. Anderson,