美国拉丁裔移民的累积一生逆境和抑郁:使用HCHS/SOL社会文化辅助研究数据的风险和保护因素的组内差异

D. Cooper, R. Bachem, M. G. Meentken, L. Aceves, Ana G. Perez Barrios
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引用次数: 12

摘要

背景:拉丁裔移民在移民之前、期间和之后都面临着多种压力。然而,过去的大多数研究都假设这些压力源的影响在拉丁裔群体中是一致的,尽管群体内存在相当大的差异。本研究的目的是(a)评估几个风险和保护因素对美国拉丁裔移民累积一生逆境和抑郁之间关系的调节作用,(b)检查拉丁裔亚组之间风险和保护过程的差异程度。方法数据来自一个被称为HCHS/SOL社会文化辅助研究的横断面次级数据集。样本(N = 2893)在四个最大的拉丁裔大都市地区进行分层随机概率抽样确定:纽约布朗克斯、加州圣地亚哥、芝加哥、伊利诺斯州和佛罗里达州迈阿密。我们在研究中包括四个拉丁裔亚组:波多黎各人、古巴人、墨西哥人和多米尼加人。结果多组回归分析结果表明,社会支持调节了累积一生逆境与抑郁之间的关系。然而,进一步的亚组分析表明,适度效应只存在于古巴和多米尼加移民中。我们还发现,感知歧视调节了古巴移民终生逆境与抑郁之间的关系,而种族认同调节了多米尼加移民终生逆境与抑郁之间的关系。结论研究结果为拉丁裔移民群体对不良事件的反应存在组内差异提供了初步证据。研究结果可用于制定针对不同拉丁裔移民群体具体需求的心理健康干预措施。
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Cumulative Lifetime Adversity and Depression among a National Sample of U.S. Latinx Immigrants: Within-group Differences in Risk and Protective Factors Using Data from the HCHS/SOL Sociocultural Ancillary Study.
Background Latinx immigrants are exposed to multiple stressors before, during, and after migration. However, most past research has assumed the effects of these stressors are uniform across Latinx groups despite considerable within-group variation. The purpose of this study was to (a) assess the moderating effects of several risk and protective factors on the association between cumulative lifetime adversity and depression among U.S. Latinx immigrants and (b) examine the extent to which risk and protective processes differed between Latinx subgroups. Method Data came from a cross-sectional secondary dataset, called the HCHS/SOL Sociocultural Ancillary Study. The sample (N = 2893) was identified using stratified random probability sampling in four of the largest Latinx metropolitan areas: the Bronx, NY, San Diego, CA, Chicago, IL, and Miami, FL. We included four Latinx subgroups in our study: Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Mexicans, and Dominicans. Results Results from multi-group regression analyses suggested that social support moderated the association between cumulative lifetime adversity and depression. However, further subgroup analyses showed the moderation effect was only present for Cuban and Dominican immigrants. We also found that perceived discrimination moderated the association between lifetime adversity and depression for Cuban immigrants and ethnic identity moderated the relationship between lifetime adversity and depression for Dominican immigrants. Conclusions Our results provide preliminary evidence for the presence of within-group differences in responses to adverse events among Latinx immigrant groups. Results can be used to inform the development of mental health interventions tailored to the specific needs of various Latinx immigrant populations.
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