Authors
Gilbert C Gee, Juan Chen, Michael S Spencer, Sarita See, Oliva A Kuester, Diem Tran, David Takeuchi
Publication date
2006/4
Journal
American Journal of Public Health
Volume
96
Issue
4
Pages
677-684
Publisher
American Public Health Association
Description
Objectives. We examined whether perceived unfair treatment is associated with health conditions, whether social support moderates this association, and whether such relationships differ by location.
Methods. Data were derived from the 1998–1999 Filipino American Community Epidemiological Study, a cross-sectional investigation of 2241 Filipino Americans living in San Francisco and Honolulu. Negative binomial regression was used to examine potential 2-way and 3-way interactions between support, unfair treatment, and city (San Francisco vs Honolulu).
Results. Reports of unfair treatment were associated with increased illness after control for education, employment, acculturation, ethnic identity, negative life events, gender, and age. Furthermore, 2-way interactions were found between instrumental support and city, emotional support and city, and unfair treatment and city, and a 3-way interaction was shown …
Total citations
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