Do US Black Women Experience Stress-Related Accelerated Biological Aging?
Top Cited Papers
- 11 March 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Human Nature
- Vol. 21 (1) , 19-38
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12110-010-9078-0
Abstract
We hypothesize that black women experience accelerated biological aging in response to repeated or prolonged adaptation to subjective and objective stressors. Drawing on stress physiology and ethnographic, social science, and public health literature, we lay out the rationale for this hypothesis. We also perform a first population-based test of its plausibility, focusing on telomere length, a biomeasure of aging that may be shortened by stressors. Analyzing data from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), we estimate that at ages 49–55, black women are 7.5 years biologically “older” than white women. Indicators of perceived stress and poverty account for 27% of this difference. Data limitations preclude assessing objective stressors and also result in imprecise estimates, limiting our ability to draw firm inferences. Further investigation of black-white differences in telomere length using large-population-based samples of broad age range and with detailed measures of environmental stressors is merited.Keywords
This publication has 115 references indexed in Scilit:
- Associations of Abdominal Fat With Perceived Racism and Passive Emotional Responses to Racism in African American WomenAmerican Journal of Public Health, 2007
- Maternal Upward Socioeconomic Mobility and Black–White Disparities in Infant BirthweightAmerican Journal of Public Health, 2006
- Psychosocial, Hemostatic, and Inflammatory Correlates of Delayed Poststress Blood Pressure RecoveryPsychosomatic Medicine, 2006
- Culturally sensitive substance abuse intervention for Hispanic and African American adolescents: empirical examples from the Alcohol Treatment Targeting Adolescents in Need (ATTAIN) ProjectAddiction, 2004
- Race-Specific Differences in Endothelial FunctionCirculation, 2004
- Role of oxidative stress in atherosclerosisThe American Journal of Cardiology, 2003
- Chronology Versus BiologyHypertension, 2002
- Telomere Length as an Indicator of Biological AgingHypertension, 2001
- Tailoring Outdoor Tobacco Advertising to Minorities in Los Angeles CountyJournal of Health Communication, 1998
- Stress‐Induced Cortisol Response and Fat Distribution in WomenObesity Research, 1994