Kuwait Times

Only half of US blacks confident of living to 35

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MIAMI: Only half of African-American youths are confident of living to 35, said a study yesterday that lays bare the toll of the racial divide in the United States. The figure is even lower, at 38 percent, for Mexican-born youths living in the United States, said the study in the December issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior. Among whites, the number who felt “almost certain” to survive to age 35 was far higher - 66 percent.

Whites and Cuban-Americans were by far the most optimistic about the future, the study found. “Whites are not subject to the racism and discrimina­tion, at institutio­nal and individual levels, experience­d by immigrants and US-born racial and ethnic minorities that undermine health, well-being and real and/or perceived life chances,” said Tara Warner, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

“Such experience­s - including fear of victimizat­ion and/or deportatio­n - can be a source of chronic stress for racial and ethnic minorities, as well as immigrants, that further undermines wellbeing, even among youth,” Warner said in a statement. The study, “Adolescent Survival Expectatio­ns: Variations by Race, Ethnicity, and Nativity,” is described by its authors as the first to document patterns of survival expectatio­ns across racial, ethnic, and immigrant groups. The data comes from a national US survey involving 17,100 people aged between 12 and 25.

Lead author Warner and co-author Raymond Swisher, a sociology professor at Bowling Green State University, narrowed their research to people who selfidenti­fied as white, black, Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban or Asian. “Our most surprising finding is that foreign-born Mexican young people are the most pessimisti­c about their future survival - even more pessimisti­c than their black peers,” said Warner. “This pessimism remains even after accounting for a number of risk factors known to undermine survival, such as lack of routine healthcare, exposure to neighborho­od poverty, and experience­s with violence.”

Researcher­s found that US-born Cubans were even slightly more optimistic than young whites. That could be linked to their relative economic advantages compared to other minority peers, said Warner. “US-born Cubans also have higher aspiration­s and expectatio­ns, even compared to whites, for significan­t events, including attending college and getting married,” Warner said. Understand­ing youth outlook is vital because it affects how they plan for the future and may lead to violence, experts say. “If young people don’t expect to live very long, they may engage in risky behaviors that help make those survival expectatio­ns a reality,” Warner warned. “We should be thinking of ways to change that.”— AFP

 ??  ?? FLORENCE, South Carolina: Republican presidenti­al candidate, former Florida Gov Jeb Bush, speaks during a campaign stop Tuesday. Bush called the struggle against the Islamic State group “the war of our time”. — AP
FLORENCE, South Carolina: Republican presidenti­al candidate, former Florida Gov Jeb Bush, speaks during a campaign stop Tuesday. Bush called the struggle against the Islamic State group “the war of our time”. — AP

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