Abstract

Exposure to trauma increases the long-term risk of mortality, and experiencing non-fatal physical assault is not an exception. To better understand population heterogeneity in this link, the current study explored Black–White differences in the association between history of non-fatal physical assault and risk of all-cause mortality over a 25-year period in the United States. Data came from the Americans’ Changing Lives (ACL) study that followed 3617 non-institutionalized respondents for up to 25 years. History of non-fatal physical assault at baseline was the predictor. Outcome was time to death due to all-cause mortality during follow-up from baseline (1986) to follow-up (2011). Confounders included gender, age, and baseline socio-economic status (education and income), health behaviors (smoking and drinking), and health status (chronic medical conditions, self-rated health, and body mass index). Race was the moderator. Cox regressions were used for multi-variable analysis. History of non-fatal physical assault at baseline was associated with an increased risk of mortality, above and beyond baseline socioeconomic status, health behaviors, and health status. Race interacted with history of non-fatal physical assault on mortality, suggesting a stronger effect for Whites compared to Blacks. In race-specific models, history of non-fatal physical assault was associated with risk of mortality for Whites but not Blacks. The current study showed that experiencing non-fatal physical assault increases the risk of premature death above and beyond demographics, socioeconomic status, health behaviors, and health status. Experiencing non-fatal physical assault may have a larger effect on premature mortality among Whites than Blacks. Future research is needed on how Blacks and Whites differ in the health consequences of social adversities.

Highlights

  • Due to higher risk of living under poverty and economic adversity, Blacks are, on average, more likely to be victims of physical assault throughout their life course [1]

  • Participants had 0.79 chronic medical conditions (SE = 0.028), which was higher in Blacks than Whites (0.91 vs. 0.78, p < 0.05)

  • Blacks and Whites did not differ in their frequency of non-fatal physical assault

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Summary

Introduction

Due to higher risk of living under poverty and economic adversity, Blacks are, on average, more likely to be victims of physical assault throughout their life course [1]. Black children who grow up in poverty are at a high risk of exposure to various types of violence [2]. Black males who live in high-crime urban areas have a high risk of victimization of robbery and theft [4]. Given their poor access to the healthcare system, a majority of Black victims do not receive proper treatment when they experience physical assault [4]. Exposure to non-fatal physical assault increases risk of depression and substance abuse [3]. Some victims of non-fatal physical assault may put on a masculine mask to hide their psychological pain [5,6,7,8]

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