Police Killings of Unarmed Black Americans Affect Mental Health of Black Community.
Black Americans are nearly three times more likely to be killed by police than their white counterparts, with even larger disparities among those who are unarmed—and these deaths are also harming the mental health of the wider black community, according to a new study co-led by a School of Public Health researcher.
Published in the The Lancet, the study is the first to show that police killings of unarmed black Americans have a causal population-level impact on the mental health of other black Americans. The study suggests police killings could contribute 55 million more poor mental health days every year among black Americans, comparable to an estimated 75 million poor mental health days among black Americans attributed to diabetes.
“Addressing this problem will require interventions to reduce the prevalence of police killings as well as programs that mitigate the adverse mental health effects in communities when these events occur,” says co-lead author Jacob Bor, assistant professor of global health. “More broadly, the findings indicate that events widely perceived to reflect structural racism can cause significant harm to the mental health of black Americans. Efforts to reduce health disparities should explicitly target structural racism.”
Structural racism is described as policies, laws, practices, and other norms entrenched in institutions that can harm a certain racial group and perpetuate racial inequities.
The researchers combined newly released data on police killings between 2013 and 2016 from the Mapping Police Violence Project database with data from the US Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) of more than 103,000 black Americans. BRFSS is a nationally representative, telephone-based, random-digit dial survey of adults ages 18 years and older.
The researchers looked at the nearly 40,000 black Americans who were interviewed by BRFSS within three months following at least one death of a black American at the hands of police in their state.
The primary exposure was the number of police killings of unarmed black Americans occurring in the three months prior to the person being surveyed. Exposure included word of mouth and news stories in print, radio, television, and/or social media. To measure mental health outcomes, the researchers asked respondents: “Now thinking about your mental health, which includes stress, depression, and problems with emotions, for how many days during the past 30 days was your mental health not good?”
Researchers then compared the number of poor mental health days experienced by black Americans surveyed after a police killing of an unarmed person to that of black Americans residing in the same state surveyed before that event.
Overall, the study suggests the police killings could contribute 1.7 additional poor mental health days per person every year, or 55 million more poor mental health days every year among black Americans in the United States. To contextualize those numbers, the authors noted diabetes is responsible for an estimated 75 million poor mental health days among black Americans.
“Our estimates therefore suggest that the population mental health burden from police killings among black Americans is nearly as large as the mental health burden associated with diabetes,” they wrote.
“The effects are likely even larger than what we estimated,” says co-lead author Atheendar S. Venkataramani, an assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, pointing to the fact that more high-profile cases of police killings that grabbed national media attention could have exerted mental health effects among black Americans living in other states, as well.
Importantly, the researchers saw no spillover mental health effects among white respondents, nor among respondents of either race in response to police killings of unarmed whites or of armed black Americans.
This striking specificity points to the importance of structural racism as a key mechanism underlying the study findings, and a driver of population health, more generally, the authors wrote: “[P]olice killings of unarmed black Americans are perceived by many as manifestations of structural racism and as implicit signals of the lower value placed on black lives by law enforcement and legal institutions—as well as by society at large.”
The other co-authors of the study were David R. Williams of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Alexander C. Tsai of Massachusetts General Hospital.
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