Early Life Racial Discrimination, Racial Centrality, and Allostatic Load Among African American Older Adults

Author:

Thomas Tobin Courtney S1ORCID,Gutiérrez Ángela2ORCID,Bell Caryn N3,Thorpe Roland J4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Community Health Sciences, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles, California, USA

2. Department of Social Medicine, Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Athens, Ohio, USA

3. Department of Social, Behavioral, and Population Sciences, Tulane University School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

4. Hopkins Center for Health Disparities Solutions, John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives Prior research documents accelerated physiological aging among African Americans due to their greater lifetime exposure to social and economic adversity. Yet, less is known about the mechanisms through which early life stressors, such as early life racial discrimination (ELRD), and later life psychosocial resources, such as racial centrality (i.e., importance of Black identity to one’s sense of self), interact to shape allostatic load (AL) in adulthood. We evaluate the life course processes linking ELRD, adult racial centrality, and adult AL among older African Americans. Research Design and Methods Data from the Nashville Stress and Health Study included African Americans aged 50 and older (N = 260). Poisson regression models assessed the links between ELRD, adult centrality, and adult AL. Interactions determined whether ELRD conditions the centrality–AL association in adulthood. Results Adolescent ELRD conferred significantly higher levels of adult centrality and 32% increased risk of high adult AL. Greater adult centrality was linked to high adult AL, but the ELRD–adult AL association was not explained by centrality. However, ELRD and centrality interact to shape adult AL, such that racial centrality was protective against high adult AL for those who experienced racial discrimination as children or adolescents. Discussion and Implications Findings highlight the multiple pathways through which racism-related stressors and psychosocial resources interact to shape physiological dysregulation in later life and underscore the health significance of racial identity for older African Americans. Clinicians and public health professionals should assess early life stressors and foster psychosocial resilience to promote healthy aging.

Funder

Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research

National Institute on Aging

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

National Institutes of Health

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

NIMHD

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

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