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Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City

Although racial/ethnic disparities in police contact are well documented, less is known about other dimensions of inequity in policing. Sexual minority groups may face disproportionate police contact. We used data from the P18 Cohort Study (Version 2), a study conducted to measure determinants of in...

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Autores principales: Khan, Maria R., Kapadia, Farzana, Geller, Amanda, Mazumdar, Medha, Scheidell, Joy D., Krause, Kristen D., Martino, Richard J., Cleland, Charles M., Dyer, Typhanye V., Ompad, Danielle C., Halkitis, Perry N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8389488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34437565
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256201
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author Khan, Maria R.
Kapadia, Farzana
Geller, Amanda
Mazumdar, Medha
Scheidell, Joy D.
Krause, Kristen D.
Martino, Richard J.
Cleland, Charles M.
Dyer, Typhanye V.
Ompad, Danielle C.
Halkitis, Perry N.
author_facet Khan, Maria R.
Kapadia, Farzana
Geller, Amanda
Mazumdar, Medha
Scheidell, Joy D.
Krause, Kristen D.
Martino, Richard J.
Cleland, Charles M.
Dyer, Typhanye V.
Ompad, Danielle C.
Halkitis, Perry N.
author_sort Khan, Maria R.
collection PubMed
description Although racial/ethnic disparities in police contact are well documented, less is known about other dimensions of inequity in policing. Sexual minority groups may face disproportionate police contact. We used data from the P18 Cohort Study (Version 2), a study conducted to measure determinants of inequity in STI/HIV risk among young sexual minority men (YSMM) in New York City, to measure across-time trends, racial/ethnic disparities, and correlates of self-reported stop-and-frisk experience over the cohort follow-up (2014–2019). Over the study period, 43% reported stop-and-frisk with higher levels reported among Black (47%) and Hispanic/Latinx (45%) than White (38%) participants. Stop-and-frisk levels declined over follow-up for each racial/ethnic group. The per capita rates among P18 participants calculated based on self-reported stop-and-frisk were much higher than rates calculated based on New York City Police Department official counts. We stratified respondents’ ZIP codes of residence into tertiles of per capita stop rates and observed pronounced disparities in Black versus White stop-and-frisk rates, particularly in neighborhoods with low or moderate levels of stop-and-frisk activity. YSMM facing the greatest economic vulnerability and mental disorder symptoms were most likely to report stop-and-frisk. Among White respondents levels of past year stop-and-frisk were markedly higher among those who reported past 30 day marijuana use (41%) versus those reporting no use (17%) while among Black and Hispanic/Latinx respondents stop-and-frisk levels were comparable among those reporting marijuana use (38%) versus those reporting no use (31%). These findings suggest inequity in policing is observed not only among racial/ethnic but also sexual minority groups and that racial/ethnic YSMM, who are at the intersection of multiple minority statuses, face disproportionate risk. Because the most socially vulnerable experience disproportionate stop-and-frisk risk, we need to reach YSMM with community resources to promote health and wellbeing as an alternative to targeting this group with stressful and stigmatizing police exposure.
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spelling pubmed-83894882021-08-27 Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City Khan, Maria R. Kapadia, Farzana Geller, Amanda Mazumdar, Medha Scheidell, Joy D. Krause, Kristen D. Martino, Richard J. Cleland, Charles M. Dyer, Typhanye V. Ompad, Danielle C. Halkitis, Perry N. PLoS One Research Article Although racial/ethnic disparities in police contact are well documented, less is known about other dimensions of inequity in policing. Sexual minority groups may face disproportionate police contact. We used data from the P18 Cohort Study (Version 2), a study conducted to measure determinants of inequity in STI/HIV risk among young sexual minority men (YSMM) in New York City, to measure across-time trends, racial/ethnic disparities, and correlates of self-reported stop-and-frisk experience over the cohort follow-up (2014–2019). Over the study period, 43% reported stop-and-frisk with higher levels reported among Black (47%) and Hispanic/Latinx (45%) than White (38%) participants. Stop-and-frisk levels declined over follow-up for each racial/ethnic group. The per capita rates among P18 participants calculated based on self-reported stop-and-frisk were much higher than rates calculated based on New York City Police Department official counts. We stratified respondents’ ZIP codes of residence into tertiles of per capita stop rates and observed pronounced disparities in Black versus White stop-and-frisk rates, particularly in neighborhoods with low or moderate levels of stop-and-frisk activity. YSMM facing the greatest economic vulnerability and mental disorder symptoms were most likely to report stop-and-frisk. Among White respondents levels of past year stop-and-frisk were markedly higher among those who reported past 30 day marijuana use (41%) versus those reporting no use (17%) while among Black and Hispanic/Latinx respondents stop-and-frisk levels were comparable among those reporting marijuana use (38%) versus those reporting no use (31%). These findings suggest inequity in policing is observed not only among racial/ethnic but also sexual minority groups and that racial/ethnic YSMM, who are at the intersection of multiple minority statuses, face disproportionate risk. Because the most socially vulnerable experience disproportionate stop-and-frisk risk, we need to reach YSMM with community resources to promote health and wellbeing as an alternative to targeting this group with stressful and stigmatizing police exposure. Public Library of Science 2021-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8389488/ /pubmed/34437565 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256201 Text en © 2021 Khan et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Khan, Maria R.
Kapadia, Farzana
Geller, Amanda
Mazumdar, Medha
Scheidell, Joy D.
Krause, Kristen D.
Martino, Richard J.
Cleland, Charles M.
Dyer, Typhanye V.
Ompad, Danielle C.
Halkitis, Perry N.
Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City
title Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City
title_full Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City
title_fullStr Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City
title_full_unstemmed Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City
title_short Racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in New York City
title_sort racial and ethnic disparities in “stop-and-frisk” experience among young sexual minority men in new york city
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8389488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34437565
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256201
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