Annette Bailey’s research while affiliated with University of Toronto and other places

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Publications (9)


Driven by Purpose: Exploring Spirituality in Black Mothers’ Coping with Loss of Children to Gun Homicide
  • Article

October 2024

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4 Reads

Homicide Studies

Annette Bailey

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Nadia Esak

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[...]

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Clarina Leung

The death of a Black child to gun homicide presents unique and ongoing coping challenges for Black parents. Current studies have provided insights into the role of spirituality in facilitating adjustment after homicide loss. However, the extent to which spirituality serves as a viable coping resource for Black mothers, who are disproportionately affected by gun homicide deaths of their children, remains unexplored. This exploratory phenomenological study explored the role of spirituality as a healing resource in 15 Black mothers’ grief experiences following the loss of their children to gun homicide. Thematic analysis revealed the role of spirituality in helping Black mothers find purpose in their loss. Following the loss of their children, mothers’ spiritual values enabled them to come to the realization that the deaths served a purpose. Spirituality served as the fuel to strengthen and renew their purpose in their grief journey. Gun homicide grief experience is an entanglement of systemic inequality and racial oppression. Exploring spirituality as a coping resource in the grieving experiences of Black survivors serves as an opportunity for enhancing community-based, culturally relevant, and spiritually-informed interventions, to adequately meet their coping needs.



Anti-Black Medical Gaslighting in Healthcare: Experiences of Black Women in Canada

April 2024

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52 Reads

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3 Citations

Canadian Journal of Nursing Research

Background Stereotype about Black people contribute to nurses and healthcare providers gaslighting and dismissing of their health concerns. Despite the popularity of the term medical gaslighting in mainstream literature, few studies have explored the experiences of Black women during pregnancy and childbirth. Purpose This paper aims to provide an in-depth insight into Black women's experiences of anti-Black medical gaslighting when accessing care during pregnancy and childbirth. Methods Utilizing qualitative methods, we conducted 24 semi-structured interviews with Black women in the Greater Toronto Area. We used thematic analysis to ground the data analysis and to generate insight into Black women's experiences. Results Three overarching themes: 1) Not Being Understood: Privileging of Medical Knowledge Contributing to the Downplaying of Health Concerns, 2) Not Being Believed: Stereotypes Contributing to Dismissive Healthcare Encounters and 3) Listen to Us: Turning off the Cycle of Medical Gaslighting. These themes highlight ways anti-Black medical gaslighting manifests in Black women's healthcare encounters to create differential access to treatment and care. Conclusions Anti-Black medical gaslighting contributes to differential access to treatment and care. Improving equitable access to treatment and care must involve addressing structural and epistemic biases in healthcare and fostering a culture of listening to humanize the experience of illness.


Evaluation of variables potentially associated with seropositivity
Disproportionate Rates of COVID-19 Among Black Canadian Communities: Lessons from a Cross-Sectional Study in the First Year of the Pandemic
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2024

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47 Reads

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2 Citations

Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities

Background Racialized communities, including Black Canadians, have disproportionately higher COVID-19 cases. We examined the extent to which SARS-CoV-2 infection has affected the Black Canadian community and the factors associated with the infection. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional survey in an area of Ontario (northwest Toronto/Peel Region) with a high proportion of Black residents along with 2 areas that have lower proportions of Black residents (Oakville and London, Ontario). SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies were determined using the EUROIMMUN assay. The study was conducted between August 15, 2020, and December 15, 2020. Results Among 387 evaluable subjects, the majority, 273 (70.5%), were enrolled from northwest Toronto and adjoining suburban areas of Peel, Ontario. The seropositivity values for Oakville and London were comparable (3.3% (2/60; 95% CI 0.4–11.5) and 3.9% (2/51; 95% CI 0.5–13.5), respectively). Relative to these areas, the seropositivity was higher for the northwest Toronto/Peel area at 12.1% (33/273), relative risk (RR) 3.35 (1.22–9.25). Persons 19 years of age or less had the highest seropositivity (10/50; 20.0%, 95% CI 10.3–33.7%), RR 2.27 (1.23–3.59). There was a trend for an interaction effect between race and location of residence as this relates to the relative risk of seropositivity. Interpretation During the early phases of the pandemic, the seropositivity within a COVID-19 high-prevalence zone was threefold greater than lower prevalence areas of Ontario. Black individuals were among those with the highest seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2.

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1823. Disproportionate Rates of COVID-19 Among Black Canadian Communities: Lessons from the First Year of the Pandemic

November 2023

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87 Reads

Open Forum Infectious Diseases

Background Black North American communities have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19. These data have been largely based on case counts, hospitalizations and mortality data. Serologic testing enables a more complete determination of infection burden by documenting infection in persons with symptomatic as well as asymptomatic infection. We used serologic testing to determine the extent to which SARS-CoV-2 had penetrated into the Black community. We examined risk factors associated with seropositivity, including the presence of medical comorbidities and the social determinants of health. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional survey in a COVID-19 high-prevalence zone in Ontario along with 2 areas that have lower rates of COVID-19 cases. SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies were determined using the EUROIMMUN assay. The study samples were collected between August 15, 2020, and December 15, 2020 prior to the deployment of COVID-19 vaccines. Proportions were compared using Fishers Exact test or chi-square; potential risk factors were examined using a multiple logistic regression approach. Results Among 387 evaluable subjects, the majority, 274 (70.8%) were enrolled from northwest Greater Toronto Area (GTA) and adjoining suburban areas of Peel, Ontario with a high proportion of Black residents. The seropositivity rates for the lower prevalence areas (Oakville and London, Ontario) were comparable (3.3% (2/60; 95% CI 0.4-11.5) and 3.9% (2/51; 95% CI 0.5-13.5), respectively). The seropositivity rate for the northwest GTA was 12.6% (26/206); RR 3.5, 95% CI 1.3-9.8). Persons under the age of 19 years had the highest seropositivity rate (10/50; 20.0%, 95% CI 10.3-33.7%). Front-line workers were greater than 3 times more likely to be seropositive compared with non-frontline workers (13.0 vs 3.2%; p=.01; RR 3.3 (95% CI 1.3 – 8.3). There was an interaction effect between race and location of residence as this relates to the relative risk of seropositivity. Conclusion During the pre-vaccine phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, the seropositivity rate for SARS-CoV-2 within a COVID-19 high-prevalence area was 3-fold greater than lower prevalence areas of Ontario, Canada. The data help to define the burden of COVID-19 within a community with a high proportion of Black residents compared with other communities. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures


Anti‐Black racism: Gaining insight into the experiences of Black nurses in Canada

October 2023

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76 Reads

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2 Citations

Nursing Inquiry

The call to address anti‐Black racism in workplaces resonates across several organizations and institutions in Canada. But specifically, the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic shed further light on how health inequities negatively impact the Black community. After conducting a literature review of the experiences of Black nurses in Canada, a deeper understanding of their plight was gained. In healthcare, the findings from the Black Nurses' Task Force report conclude that anti‐Black racist practices are pervasive in nursing, and there remains a paucity of research in this area. This study builds off the report by exploring how Black nurses experience anti‐Black racism while working in Canada's healthcare system. Inspired by critical race theory and Black feminist thought, an exploratory qualitative research study was conducted, using semistructured interviews to gather data. The study concludes that Black nurses experience anti‐Black racism within the workplace, and it manifests itself through some of the attitudes of colleagues, patients, and nurses in leadership roles. Despite policies and statements that were in place to protect them, anti‐Black racism continues to occur systematically. The findings point to the need for change in the overall workplace culture, which includes a fair representation of Black nurses in leadership roles, further research to identify best practices for tackling anti‐Black racism within Canada's healthcare system, and mandatory training on anti‐Black racism for healthcare leaders, educators, and service providers.


Trauma-Altered Identity Metaphoric Art
Deconstructing the Trauma-Altered Identity of Black Men

March 2023

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145 Reads

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5 Citations

Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma

Multiple and continuous traumatic events experienced by Black men impose altering effects on their identities, and their mentalization and presentation of themselves in society. However, the unique dynamics of the impact of trauma in shaping Black men’s identities are not well understood, because their experiences with trauma are not well documented. This paper is a secondary analysis of the qualitative component of a mixed method study that explored trauma, social support, and resilience among 103 racialized youth survivors of gun violence in Toronto, Canada. The analysis for this paper specifically focused on young Black male participants in the study to understand their disproportional experiences with gun violent trauma. Thematic analysis of their narrative demonstrated three themes: 1) trapped by the trauma of systemic oppression; 2) identity marred by the trauma of systemic oppression; and 3) masculinity shifted by the trauma of systemic oppression. The thematic mapping of themes and subthemes yielded the trauma-altered identity (TAI), a concept coined to represent the intersections of trauma, systemic oppression, masculinity, and the identity of Black male survivors. Using a metaphoric artwork to conceptualise the TAI, we explore its psychosocial impacts and set strategies for deconstructing its influence on Black men. While we acknowledge that trauma experiences may vary among Black males, we recognise that understanding intersections of risks associated with trauma among young Black males presents opportunities for policy discussions, advocacy, and social justice reforms.



Citations (1)


... We do not have mental health services that focus specifically on helping young Black men work through the traumatic experiences of being a victim of gun violence. Apart from research by Bailey et al., (2013Bailey et al., ( , 2023, Bailey et al. (2013), & Khenti (2013) centered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, we have a limited understanding from within a Canadian context and we tend to draw on research that comes from the United States. The context of gun violence in both countries is very different however based on research by Ginwright (2012), Richardson, Wical, Kottage et al., (2020), & Rich (2009) the way young Black men are structurally impacted by anti-Black racism and gun violence is very much the same. ...

Reference:

“Keep it moving”: The Traumatic Impact of Gun Violence in the Lives of Young Black Men
Deconstructing the Trauma-Altered Identity of Black Men

Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma