‘Findings suggest structural racism operates differently for white vs minoritized groups,’ researchers sayA new study which found racial minorities living in poor areas actually have a lower risk of mental health problems relating to pregnancy compared to their similarly situated white counterparts shows racism is a “complex” topic, according to the authors.This paper, published in Social Science and Medicine, hypothesized that residing in “structurally deprived neighborhoods” would be associated with a higher少数人群报告医院报告“围产期精神疾病”的风险,而白人母亲由于系统性种族主义而不会存在这种联系。“围产期”通常是指直至出生前不久的时间,直到分娩前的一年和一年后出生后的一年。无论如何,该论文的作者发现,对于黑人,亚洲,亚洲和太平洋居住的人来说,与较低的居民相关的是,与较低的居民相反,这是一个较低的人,这是一个较低的人,这是一个与众不同的人,这是一个与众不同的人。作者写道:“我们的发现揭示了结构性种族主义与医院报告的PMD之间存在复杂的联系。”他们还建议,在白人社区中生活的“与种族主义有关的压力”是原因。相应的作家Mahader Mahader Tamene是加利福尼亚大学伯克利大学(University of California Berkeley)的审查,以至于两次上电子邮件的研究人员都在审查了两个人的言论。也在加州大学伯克利分校的布拉德肖(Bradshaw)响应修复程序的一封电子邮件,将其推迟到塔米尼(Tamene)。 Other co-authors did not respond to emails and voicemails sent in the past weeks.The study used the “Index of Concentration at the Extremes,” which an expert said is “grounded in critical theory.”Ian Kingsbury, the director of research at medical reform group Do No Harm, criticized the index, calling it “an ideologically loaded endeavor grounded in critical theory” that “supposes that race itself (in addition to income) is a measure of p