Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
952644 Social Science & Medicine 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article examines whether self-reported racial discrimination is associated with greater use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and assesses whether the effects of reported racial discrimination are specific to the setting in which the unfair treatment occurred (i.e., medical or nonmedical settings). Data were drawn from the National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States (MIDUS) of Black adults aged 25 and older at baseline (N = 201). Analyses account for multiple forms of discrimination: major lifetime discriminatory events and everyday discrimination (more commonplace negative occurrences). Using logistic and negative binomial regression, results reveal that racial discrimination was associated with a higher likelihood of using any type of CAM as well as using more modalities of CAM. Also, both discrimination in health care and discrimination in nonmedical contexts predicted greater use of CAM. The findings underscore the tenet that health care choices, while influenced by health status and availability of health care resources, are also shaped by perceived barriers. The experience of racial discrimination among Black people is associated with greater use of alternative means of health care, as a way to cope with the barriers they experience in institutional settings in the United States.

► Examines the role of racial discrimination on the use of non-conventional medicine among Black adults in the USA. ► Major racial discrimination and daily racial discrimination were associated with greater CAM use among Black adults. ► Major racial discrimination in medical settings alone, and across multiple settings, was positively associated with CAM use.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
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