Emerging Adulthood Attributes, Discrimination, Mental Health, and Substance Use in a Sample of Asian, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, and White College Students.

IF 2.4 4区 心理学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES Asian American Journal of Psychology Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Epub Date: 2021-09-09 DOI:10.1037/aap0000254
Samuel D Spencer, Pallav Pokhrel, Susana Helm, Katarzyna Wilczek, Arthur Galimov, Steve Sussman
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Abstract

Although Asian/Pacific Islanders are considered a single ethnic/racial category in national studies, Native Hawaiians/other Pacific Islanders (NHOPIs) and Asians show marked disparities in health outcomes and risk behaviors, including substance use. Currently, knowledge regarding the psychosocial mechanisms by which NHOPI ethnicity is associated with increased substance use, compared with Asian or White, is limited, especially among emerging adults. The present study tested a model in which the relationship between NHOPI ethnicity and higher substance use (i.e., current tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, and illicit drug use) was hypothesized to be mediated through higher emerging adulthood stress (e.g., feeling "in-between," instability), higher self-reported racial/ethnic discrimination, substance use in one's social networks, and poorer mental health symptomology (i.e., depression, anxiety). Data collected at a single time-point from 2,344 college students (M age = 21.2 [SD = 2.1]; 54% Women; 24% NHOPI, 49% Asian, 27% White) were analyzed by employing structural equation modeling. NHOPI and Asian ethnicity were dummy coded with reference to White, and separate analyses were run for NHOPI and Asian groups, with White as the reference group. Results indicated that the association between NHOPI ethnicity and higher substance use was mediated in two steps, via higher racial/ethnic discrimination and poorer mental health symptomatology. NHOPI ethnicity, but not Asian, was associated with higher identification with emerging adulthood attributes, which in turn was associated with increased substance use. Implications are discussed in the context of reducing health disparities faced by NHOPIs.

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亚裔、夏威夷原住民/太平洋岛民和白人大学生的成年特征、歧视、心理健康和药物使用情况。
尽管在全国性研究中,亚裔/太平洋岛民被认为是一个单一的民族/种族类别,但夏威夷原住民/其他太平洋岛民(NHOPIs)和亚裔在健康结果和风险行为(包括药物使用)方面表现出明显的差异。目前,有关夏威夷原住民/太平洋其他岛民与亚裔或白人相比,与药物使用增加相关的社会心理机制的知识还很有限,尤其是在新兴成年人中。本研究测试了一个模型,该模型假设 NHOPI 族裔与更多药物使用(即当前烟草、酒精、大麻和非法药物的使用)之间的关系是通过更高的新兴成人期压力(如感觉 "夹在中间"、不稳定)、更高的自我报告的种族/民族歧视、个人社交网络中的药物使用以及更差的心理健康症状(如抑郁、焦虑)来调节的。我们采用结构方程模型分析了从 2344 名大学生(中位年龄 = 21.2 [SD = 2.1];54% 女性;24% NHOPI,49% 亚裔,27% 白人)中收集的单个时间点数据。NHOPI 和亚裔参照白人进行虚拟编码,以白人为参照组,分别对 NHOPI 和亚裔组进行分析。结果表明,NHOPI 族裔与较高药物使用率之间的联系是通过较高的种族/民族歧视和较差的心理健康症状两个步骤中介起来的。NHOPI 族裔(而非亚裔)与较高的新兴成人属性认同相关,而新兴成人属性认同又与较高的药物使用率相关。本文讨论了在减少非华裔原住民面临的健康差异方面的意义。
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CiteScore
3.40
自引率
6.70%
发文量
57
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