1. Poor health disparities among racialized students in a Canadian university.
- Author
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Banerjee, Ananya Tina, Lau, Ashley, and Bender, Jacqueline L
- Subjects
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MINORITY students , *CROSS-sectional method , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC disparities in health , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RACISM , *SURVEYS , *ODDS ratio , *SOUTH Asians , *RACE , *HEALTH equity , *COLLEGE students , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MIDDLE Easterners - Abstract
The short report aims to examine differences in self-rated general health across racialized post-secondary students at a university in Ontario, Canada. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to examine poor health as an outcome among racialized students as whole, as well as across Asian, South Asian, Afro-Caribbean and Middle Eastern student groups in comparison to white Caucasian post-secondary students. After adjusting for several covariates, racialized students as a whole had 2.43 times the odds of reporting poor general health compared to white Caucasian students. Asian (OR = 2.77; CI = 1.84-4.18; p < 0.05) and South Asian (OR = 2.52; CI = 1.56-4.08; p < 0.05) students were significantly more likely to report poor health compared to white Caucasian students. The findings call for further attention to the health needs of racialized post-secondary students living in Canada and creating campuses where diverse student populations feel safe and systemically included. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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