Writing about justice and injustice: Complex effects on affect, performance, threat, and biological responses to acute social stress among african American women and men

被引:6
作者
Lucas, Todd [1 ,2 ]
Yamin, Jolin B. [3 ]
Krohner, Shoshana [3 ]
Goetz, Stefan M. M. [4 ]
Kopetz, Catalina [3 ]
Lumley, Mark A. [3 ]
机构
[1] Michigan State Univ, Coll Human Med, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Div Publ Hlth, 200 East 1st St, Flint, MI 48502 USA
[2] Michigan State Univ, Coll Human Med, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, 909 Wilson Rd, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
[3] Wayne State Univ, Dept Psychol, 5057 Woodward Ave, Detroit, MI 48202 USA
[4] Peace Res Inst Oslo, Hausmanns Gate 3, N-0186 Oslo, Norway
关键词
Justice; Stress; Stress reactivity; African American; Trier social stress test; Expressive writing; Belief in a just world; PERCEIVED RACISM; STEREOTYPE THREAT; HEALTH; BELIEFS; WORLD; REACTIVITY; RECOVERY; RISK; SELF; DISCRIMINATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115019
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Objective: Brief, culturally-tailored, and scalable stress coping interventions are needed to address a broad range of stress-related health disparities, including among African Americans. In this study, we develop two brief justice writing interventions and demonstrate a methodological approach for evaluating how prompting African Americans to think about justice and injustice can alter responses to acute social stress.Methods: African American women and men were randomized to a neutral writing condition or one of two justice-based writing interventions, which prompted them to recall past experiences of personal justice - with (adjunctive injustice) or without (personal justice-only) recalling and writing about injustice. Participants then completed a modified Trier Social Stress Test, during which they received feedback on poor performance. We measured cognitive performance, affect, and perceived threat in response to task feedback. We also measured blood pressure and salivary cortisol stress responses.Results: Men experienced more positive emotion, performed better on the stressor task, and were less threatened by poor performance feedback in the personal justice-only condition. Men also had lower systolic blood pressure reactivity in the justice writing conditions compared to control. Women experienced less positive emotion, performed worse on the stressor task, and were more threatened by feedback in the personal justice-only con-dition. Women also had lower cortisol recovery after the stressor task in the adjunctive injustice condition.Conclusion: Thinking about justice and injustice may alter performance, affect, threat, and biological responses to acute social stress. Still, gender differences highlight that justice thinking is likely to produce heterogeneous and complex stress coping responses among African Americans.
引用
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页数:11
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