National Benchmark Study of Employment Equity Among Multiply Marginalized Persons of Color with Disabilities During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Bootstrap Approach

J Rehabil. 2022;88(1):108-118.

Abstract

Background: Research examining state vocational rehabilitation agency (SVRA) sponsored service patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic is needed to improve employment outcomes among multiply marginalized persons of color with disabilities (i.e., African Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans or Alaska Natives, Latinx, and Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders). Scarce attention has been paid to examining outcome inequities in the crisis.

Objective: This study applied a stratified bootstrap data expansion approach to assess the relationship between race/ethnicity, gender, level of educational attainment at closure and employment outcomes among target group members.

Methods: National fiscal year (FY) 2019 Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA)-911 case records (N =114,229) closed between January 20, 2020 (date of first reported COVID-19 infection in the U.S.) to June 30 2020 were extracted and re-sampled across multiple trials using bootstrap procedures to increase logistic regression model accuracy.

Results: The findings indicated that African Americans, Asian Americans and Native American or Alaska Natives were statistically significantly less likely to achieve successful employment than non-Latinx Whites. Success probabilities in the COVID-19 pandemic were 'poorest' for Native American or Alaska Native VR consumers followed by African Americans, Asian Americans, Latinx, non-Latinx Whites, and then Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders. African Americans and Native Americans or Alaska Natives were more often closed unsuccessful because they could not be located when compared to non-Latinx Whites.

Conclusions: These findings call for new targeted SVRA service initiatives.

Keywords: Bootstrap Data Expansion; COVID-19 Pandemic; Employment Outcomes; Multiply Marginalized People of Color with Disabilities.