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    How Anti-Asian Hate is Worsening Older San Franciscans’ Health

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    The fear of becoming a victim of a hate crime is a risk factor for poorer health among older Asians.

    By

    Laura López González
    Illustration by Lingsheng Li

    Older San Franciscans’ fear of becoming a victim of anti-Asian hate may be driving a hidden epidemic of isolation and poorer health, a new UC San Francisco study shows.

    What’s new: Fearful of becoming a victim of anti-Asian hate, older, Asian San Franciscans are  choosing to spend more time at home, forgoing activities that they previously loved, like exercising, seeing loved ones and dining out, suggests the research published as a letter in the journal, JAMA Internal Medicine. This increased isolation may be fueling poorer mental and physical health among the city’s elderly Asian community if results from 80 in-depth interviews among Asian residents 50 years and older and local clinicians are anything to go by.

    “We heard a lot of stories about people avoiding going outside to exercise and grocery shop,” explains UCSF Division of Geriatrics fellow Lingsheng Li, MD, MHS. Li carried out the research, alongside a team of UCSF faculty, staff and learners. “Those activities are essential for well-being and quality of life – especially for older adults who are already isolated in the community.”

    “Some people even avoided going to the doctor’s office because it required them to get on a bus, which is where many of these attacks have happened.”

     

    “I’m scared when I’m stopped outside, especially at the bus stop since I could be spat on or get assaulted any minute. I am so worried that I won’t be able to come home alive,” reads a quote from one study participant in this hand-drawn picture by UCSF fellow and researcher Lingsheng Li of an older Asian man.
    Illustration by Lingsheng Li
    “I’m scared when I’m stopped outside, especially at the bus stop since I could be spat on or get assaulted any minute. I am so worried that I won’t be able to come home alive,” reads a quote from one study participant in this hand-drawn picture by UCSF fellow and researcher Lingsheng Li of an older Asian man.
    Illustration by Lingsheng Li

    The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health.

    Among the 20 San Francisco health clinicians interviewed, many reported that isolation exacerbated chronic conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes and cognitive decline in some patients.

    “I’ve seen a few cases where a patient had mild cognitive impairment that worsened to frank dementia,” one physician told UCSF researchers. “After a thorough workup, I have to conclude it’s because they’re no longer going out and walking every day.”

    Why it matters: Nationally, 1 in 3 Asians and Pacific Islanders faced racial abuse in 2023. In San Francisco, about a quarter of anti-Asian attacks that targeted Asians 60 years and older between March 2020 and December 2021 involved physical violence.

    An illustration of an elderly Asian woman wearing a hat and a face mask to protect from repsiratory disease. Next to the illustration is a quote from the woman, which reads: “We are afraid of the streets. It’s not safe… we are stuck at home all the time. I have developed depression.”
    Illustration by Lingsheng Li
    An illustration of an elderly Asian woman wearing a hat and a face mask to protect from repsiratory disease. Below the illustration is a quote from the woman, which reads: “We are afraid of the streets. It’s not safe… we are stuck at home all the time. I have developed depression.”
    Illustration by Lingsheng Li

    What does this mean? Fear of becoming a victim of anti-Asian hate could be a risk factor for poorer mental, social and physical health for older Asian community members. Although some clinicians and patients in Li’s study said they felt screening for this would be difficult, many also felt that addressing racism’s role in health was part of comprehensive health care.

    “We also heard very strong recommendations from people who feel like clinicians should screen for anti-Asian hate because it shows clinicians care about the whole person and that acts of racism and violence against them, their families and their communities are not okay,” Li explains. “As clinicians, we may not be able to change the situation right away, but we can still provide that therapeutic listening space and show patients that we care.”

    Li’s team co-created a simple screening question with clinicians involved in the study to help start a conversation between patients and health care workers: “Do you feel safe outside of your home?”

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