Quantity and quality: Dimensions and provisions of social support inform the role of social pain minimization in the discrimination-to-mental health relation among Black Americans

被引:4
作者
Benbow, Kyle L. [1 ]
Kunstman, Jonathan W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Auburn Univ, Auburn, AL USA
关键词
discrimination; social pain minimization; emotion invalidation; race; mental health; social support; RACIAL-DISCRIMINATION; MICROAGGRESSIONS; CONSEQUENCES; RESPONSES; CULTURE; NEGLECT; STRESS; SAMPLE; SKIN;
D O I
10.1521/jscp.2024.43.1.81
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Introduction: Despite growing evidence that emotion invalidation, termed social pain minimization (SPM), contributes to discrimination's negative effect on mental health and suicidality (Benbow et al., 2022; Kinkel-Ram et al., 2021), it is unclear what elements of social support give rise to SPM. Is SPM related to social support quantity (e.g., the number of support providers and frequency with which people seek support)? Or, is social support quality (e.g., active versus passive destructive responses and threatened support needs) most central to SPM? This work addresses these questions and provides evidence that support quality rather than quantity shapes feelings of SPM and informs SPM's mediating role in the discrimination-to-mental health relation. Methods: With a cross-sectional correlational design, 232 Black participants (42.9% female; M-age = 34.86, SDage = 11.15) completed measures of daily discrimination, social support quantity and quality, SPM, and mental health. Results: At a bivariate level, indices of support quality, but not quantity, predicted SPM and mental health. However, when these indices of support quality were entered simultaneously in multiple regression, only passive destructive (PD) treatment and provisions of worth positively and negatively predicted SPM, respectively. Serial parallel mediation analysis further revealed that PD treatment and threats to self-worth fueled SPM's mediating role in the association between discrimination and mental health. Discussion: The results suggest that support quality, not quantity, sets the stage for SPM. Although many dimensions of support quality related to SPM, PD treatment and threats to self-worth had the strongest unique relationships to minimization. Moreover, these support dimensions contributed to SPM's mediating role in the link between discrimination and mental health. In discrimination's wake, PD responses and threatened self-worth increased SPM, which then undermined mental health.
引用
收藏
页码:81 / 102
页数:22
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]   Attention by design: Using attention checks to detect inattentive respondents and improve data quality [J].
Abbey, James D. ;
Meloy, Margaret G. .
JOURNAL OF OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT, 2017, 53-56 :63-70
[2]   Perceived everyday discrimination and psychological distress: does social support matter? [J].
Ajrouch, Kristine J. ;
Reisine, Susan ;
Lim, Sungwoo ;
Sohn, Woosung ;
Ismail, Amid .
ETHNICITY & HEALTH, 2010, 15 (04) :417-434
[3]   Self-enhancement and self-protection: What they are and what they do [J].
Alicke, Mark D. ;
Sedikides, Constantine .
EUROPEAN REVIEW OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 20 :1-48
[4]   SOCIAL SUPPORT AND IMMUNE FUNCTION AMONG SPOUSES OF CANCER-PATIENTS [J].
BARON, RS ;
CUTRONA, CE ;
HICKLIN, D ;
RUSSELL, DW ;
LUBAROFF, DM .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1990, 59 (02) :344-352
[5]   THE NEED TO BELONG - DESIRE FOR INTERPERSONAL ATTACHMENTS AS A FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN-MOTIVATION [J].
BAUMEISTER, RF ;
LEARY, MR .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1995, 117 (03) :497-529
[6]  
Bell R.A., 1988, Communication Quarterly, V36, P1, DOI [10.1080/01463378809369703, DOI 10.1080/01463378809369703]
[7]  
Benbow K. L., 2023, Social pain minimization mediates workplace discrimination's effect on burnout
[8]  
Benbow K. L., 2022, Black employee mistreatment, social pain minimization, and employee silence
[9]   Race, social pain minimization, and mental health [J].
Benbow, Kyle L. ;
Smith, Brianna L. ;
Tolbert, Karlee J. ;
Deska, Jason C. ;
Kunstman, Jonathan W. .
GROUP PROCESSES & INTERGROUP RELATIONS, 2022, 25 (07) :1861-1879
[10]   Emotion regulation mediates relationships between perceived childhood invalidation, emotional reactivity, and emotional eating [J].
Braden, Abby ;
Anderson, LaNaya ;
Redondo, Rachel ;
Watford, Tanya ;
Emley, Elizabeth ;
Ferrell, Emily .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 26 (14) :2937-2949