Debt Stress, College Stress: Implications for Black and Latinx Students' Mental Health.

IF 2.8 2区 社会学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES Race and Social Problems Pub Date : 2022-09-01 Epub Date: 2021-08-13 DOI:10.1007/s12552-021-09346-z
Faith M Deckard, Bridget J Goosby, Jacob E Cheadle
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Abstract

Educational debt is an economic stressor that is harmful to mental health and disproportionately experienced by African American and Latinx youth. In this paper, we use a daily diary design to explore the link between mental health, context specific factors like "college stress" and time use, and educational debt stress, or stress incurred from thinking about educational debt and college affordability. This paper utilizes data from a sample of predominately African American and Latinx college students who provided over 1,000 unique time observations. Results show that debt-induced stress is predictive of greater self-reported hostility, guilt, sadness, fatigue, and general negative emotion. Moreover, the relationship may be partly mediated by "college stress" reflecting course loads and post-graduation job expectations. For enrolled students then, educational debt may influence mental health directly through concerns over affordability, or indirectly by shaping facets of college life. The window that our granular data provides into college experiences suggest that the consequences of student debt are manifest and immediate. Further, the documented day-to-day mental health burden for minority students may contribute to downstream processes like matriculation.

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债务压力,大学压力:对黑人和拉丁裔学生心理健康的影响》。
教育债务是一种对心理健康有害的经济压力,非裔美国人和拉美裔青年承受的这种压力尤为严重。在本文中,我们采用每日日记的设计来探讨心理健康、"大学压力 "和时间利用等具体因素与教育债务压力(或因思考教育债务和大学负担能力而产生的压力)之间的联系。本文使用的数据来自非裔美国人和拉美裔大学生的样本,他们提供了超过 1,000 次独特的时间观察。结果表明,债务引起的压力可预测自我报告的敌意、内疚、悲伤、疲劳和一般负面情绪。此外,这种关系可能部分受到反映课程负担和毕业后工作预期的 "大学压力 "的影响。因此,对于在校学生来说,教育债务可能会通过对经济承受能力的担忧直接影响心理健康,也可能通过塑造大学生活的各个方面间接影响心理健康。我们的细化数据为我们提供了一个了解大学生活的窗口,这表明学生债务的后果是明显而直接的。此外,记录在案的少数族裔学生的日常心理健康负担可能会影响到大学入学等下游过程。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.50%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Race and Social Problems (RASP) provides a multidisciplinary forum for the publication of articles and discussion of issues germane to race and its enduring relationship to socioeconomic, psychological, political, and cultural problems. The journal publishes original empirical studies, reviews of past research, theoretical studies, and invited essays that advance the understanding of the complexities of race and its relationship to social problems.  Submissions from the fields of social work, anthropology, communications, criminology, economics, history, law, political science, psychology, public health, and sociology are welcome.
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