Researchers from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health's Southern Public Health and Criminal Justice Research Center will use a $4 million grant from the National Institute of Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) to study structural racism and discrimination.
Brooke EE Montgomery, Ph.D., MPH, George Pro, Ph.D., and Nick Zaller, Ph.D., received a NIMHD Research Project Grant (R01) to study the relationship between the racial income gap and racial disparities in chronic diseases in a sample of low-income Black men recruited from central Arkansas.
This form of structural racism and discrimination is of particular interest as it has multilevel implications that strengthen risk factors and weaken protective factors for the health of Black men, said Montgomery. She added that temporarily reducing the gap through the provision of income supplementation is an innovative strategy to address this historical source of oppression and promote the health of Black men's health.
Black men ages 45 and older will be the focus of the research. The study will include some participants who previously have been incarcerated. Each participant will be interviewed and surveyed three times during the 12-month study. Some men will be randomly selected to receive a financial stipend, downloaded onto a card, to use throughout the study.
“We’ll study the health habits, commonalities and differences between the people who get the money and those who don’t,” Montgomery said.
Our goal is to advance antiracist health research, inform policies that promote health equity, and dismantle structural racism and discrimination across multiple systems of oppression.
Credit: Kev Moye "UAMS College of Public Health Researchers to Use $4 Million Grant to Address Health Impact of Structural Racism, Discrimination on Middle-Aged Black Men", https://news.uams.edu/2022/09/15/uams-college-of-public-health-researchers-to-use-4-million-grant-to-address-health-impact-of-structural-racism-discrimination-on-middle-aged-black-men/
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