Racial/Ethnic Discrimination and Suicidal Ideation in Emerging Adults: The Role of Traumatic Stress and Depressive Symptoms Varies by Gender not Race/Ethnicity

被引:0
作者
Lillian Polanco-Roman
Deidre M. Anglin
Regina Miranda
Elizabeth L. Jeglic
机构
[1] The Graduate Center,Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
[2] CUNY,undefined
[3] City College of New York,undefined
[4] CUNY,undefined
[5] Hunter College,undefined
[6] CUNY,undefined
[7] John Jay College of Criminal Justice,undefined
[8] CUNY,undefined
[9] Columbia University/New York State Psychiatric Institute,undefined
来源
Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2019年 / 48卷
关键词
Racial/ethnic discrimination; Traumatic stress; Depression; Suicidal ideation; Emerging adult;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Drawing from Race-Based Traumatic Stress theory, the present study examined whether traumatic stress and depressive symptoms differentially help explain the relation between racial/ethnic discrimination and suicidal ideation across gender and racial/ethnic groups. A racially/ethnically diverse group of emerging adults (N = 1344; Mage = 19.88, SD = 2.25; 72% female; 46% Hispanic) completed a battery of self-report measures. A cross-sectional design was employed with a series of hierarchical linear regression models and bootstrapping procedures to examine the direct and indirect relation between racial/ethnic discrimination and suicidal ideation through traumatic stress and depressive symptoms across gender and race/ethnicity. The findings suggest an indirect relation through depressive symptoms, but not traumatic stress, and a serial indirect relation through traumatic stress to depressive symptoms in young women and young men, the latter of which was stronger in young women. The indirect relations did not vary by racial/ethnic group. Cumulative experiences of racial/ethnic discrimination may impact suicide-related risk via increases in psychiatric symptomology (i.e., traumatic stress and depressive symptoms), particularly in young women. Racial/ethnic discrimination experiences should be accounted for as a potential source of psychological distress in the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of suicidal thoughts and behavior, especially among young women endorsing traumatic stress and depressive symptoms. Further research is warranted to better understand the gender difference in the relation between racial/ethnic discrimination and suicide-related risk.
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页码:2023 / 2037
页数:14
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