Do Discrimination and Negative Interactions with Family Explain the Relationship between Interracial Relationship Status and Mental Disorder?

IF 3 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Socius Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23780231221124852
Amy Irby-Shasanmi, Christy L Erving
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Using the stress process model, the authors investigate whether individuals in interracial relationships experience greater risk for past-year mood and anxiety disorder compared with their same-race relationship counterparts. The authors also assess interracial relationship status differences in external stressors (i.e., discrimination and negative interactions with family) and whether stress exposure explains mental disorder differences between individuals in interracial versus same-race romantic partnerships. Data are from the National Survey of American Life (2001-2003). Results show that individuals in interracial relationships are at greater risk for anxiety disorder (but not mood disorder) relative to those in same-race relationships. Interracially partnered individuals also report more discrimination from the public and greater negative interactions with family. External stressors partially explain the higher risk for anxiety disorder among individuals in interracial partnerships. This study addresses a void in the literature on discrimination, family relationships, and health for the growing population of individuals in interracial unions.

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歧视和与家庭的负面互动是否解释了种族间关系状况与精神障碍的关系?
利用压力过程模型,作者调查了跨种族关系中的个体是否比同种族关系中的个体在过去的一年里经历了更大的情绪和焦虑障碍的风险。作者还评估了外部压力源(即歧视和与家庭的负面互动)下的种族间关系状态差异,以及压力暴露是否解释了种族间和同种族恋爱关系中个体精神障碍的差异。数据来自2001-2003年美国生活全国调查。结果表明,与同种族的人相比,跨种族关系中的人患焦虑症(但不是情绪障碍)的风险更大。跨种族伴侣的个体也报告更多来自公众的歧视,与家人的负面互动也更多。外部压力因素在一定程度上解释了跨种族伴侣中个体患焦虑症的高风险。这项研究填补了关于歧视、家庭关系和跨种族婚姻中不断增长的个人健康的文献空白。
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来源期刊
Socius
Socius Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.70%
发文量
84
审稿时长
8 weeks
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