父母感知邻里安全与儿童内化症状:种族和社会经济地位差异。

Journal of mental health & clinical psychology Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-19
Shervin Assari
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在美国,由于居住隔离,少数族裔和社会经济地位低的家庭往往比白人和高社会经济地位的家庭生活在更不安全的社区。因此,在美国,种族和社会经济地位与社区安全密切相关。由于在不安全的社区中压力的高长期性,感知到的社区安全可能是种族和社会经济地位与儿童心理健康相关的一种机制。同时,种族和社会经济地位可能改变邻里安全感知对儿童心理健康的影响。目的:探讨社区安全对儿童内化症状影响的种族和社会经济地位差异,比较不同种族和社会经济地位的美国儿童父母感知社区安全对儿童内化症状的影响。方法:本横断面研究包括来自青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究的10484名儿童。采用混合效应回归进行数据分析。预测变量为家长对邻里安全的感知,并将其作为一项连续测量。主要结局是儿童报告的内化症状。种族、父母教育程度、家庭收入和家庭结构是调节因素。结果:总体而言,父母的高邻里安全与儿童较低的内化症状水平相关。种族和家庭收入对儿童内化症状的主观邻里安全有显著的交互作用。与白人家庭相比,黑人家庭的父母对社区安全的感知与儿童的内化症状呈更强的负相关。高收入家庭的父母对社区安全的感知与儿童内化症状的负相关强于低收入家庭。父母教育或家庭结构与父母感知的邻里安全对儿童内化症状没有显著的相互作用。结论:社区安全对儿童内化症状的影响程度可能与种族和家庭收入有关。种族和社会经济地位对儿童心理健康结果的一些影响可能是由于与环境因素(如邻里安全)的相互作用。不同种族和社会经济地位群体在感知社区安全和儿童福祉之间的关系上为何以及如何存在差异,还需要更多的研究。
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Parents' Perceived Neighborhood Safety and Children's Internalizing Symptoms: Race and Socioeconomic Status Differences.

Background: In the United States, due to residential segregation, racial minorities and families with low socioeconomic status (SES) tend to live in less safe neighborhoods than their White and high SES counterparts. As such, in the US, race and SES closely correlate with neighborhood safety. Due to the high chronicity of stress in unsafe neighborhoods, perceived neighborhood safety may be a mechanism through which race and SES are linked to children's mental health. Simultaneously, race and SES may alter the effects of perceived neighborhood safety on children's mental health.

Aim: To explore racial and SES differences in the effects of neighborhood safety on children's internalizing symptoms, we compared racially and SES diverse groups of American children for the effects of parents' perceived neighborhood safety on children's internalizing symptoms.

Methods: This cross-sectional study included 10484 children from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. Mixed-effects regression was used for data analysis. The predictor variable was parents' perceived neighborhood safety which was treated as a continuous measure. The primary outcome was children's internalizing symptoms reported by children. Race, parental education, household income, and family structure were moderators.

Results: Overall, the parents' high neighborhood safety was associated with lower levels of internalizing symptoms in children. Race and household income showed statistically significant interactions with subjective neighborhood safety on children's internalizing symptoms. Parents' perceived neighborhood safety showed a stronger inverse association with children's internalizing symptoms for Black than White families. Parents' perceived neighborhood safety showed a stronger inverse association with children's internalizing symptoms for high income than low-income families. Parental education or family structure did not show any significant interaction with parents' perceived neighborhood safety on children's internalizing symptoms.

Conclusion: The degree to which neighborhood safety may be associated with children's internalizing symptoms may depend on race and household income. Some of the effects of race and SES on children's mental health outcomes may be due to interactions with contextual factors such as neighborhood safety. More research is needed on why and how diverse racial and SES groups differ in the association between perceived neighborhood safety and children's well-being.

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