家庭收入对非裔美国人青少年内化症状的保护作用比对欧裔美国人青少年内化症状的保护作用小。

Shervin Assari, Sondos Islam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:在美国全国青少年前样本中调查种族对家庭收入影响青少年前内化症状的不同作用:这是一项横断面研究,使用的数据来自青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究。第一波 ABCD 数据包括 5913 名 9 至 10 岁的青少年。自变量为家庭收入。主要结果是由教师报告的简明问题监测量表(BPM)测量的内化症状:总体而言,高家庭收入与较低的学龄前青少年内化症状水平相关。在控制所有混杂因素的情况下,种族与家庭收入对学龄前儿童内化症状的交互作用在统计学上具有显著性,这表明高家庭收入对非裔美国人学龄前儿童内化症状的保护作用弱于欧裔学龄前儿童:结论:与历史上被边缘化的非裔青少年相比,高家庭收入对社会地位优越的欧裔青少年的内化症状具有更显著的保护作用。消除不同种族群体之间的内化行为差距需要的不仅仅是社会经济地位的平等。未来的研究应该研究非裔美国人家庭在所有收入水平上所经历的制度性和结构性种族主义的调节作用。此类研究或许可以解释为什么家庭收入高的非裔美国人青少年前期仍有内化症状的高风险。
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Diminished Protective Effects of Household Income on Internalizing Symptoms among African American than European American Pre-Adolescents.

Aim: To investigate the differential role of race on the effect of household income on pre-adolescents' internalizing symptoms in a national sample of U.S. pre-adolescents.

Methods: This is a cross-sectional study that used data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. Wave 1 ABCD data included 5,913 adolescents between ages 9 and 10 years old. The independent variable was household income. The primary outcome was internalizing symptoms measured by the teacher report of the Brief Problem Monitor (BPM) scale.

Results: Overall, high household income was associated with lower levels of pre-adolescents internalizing symptoms. Race showed statistically significant interaction with household income on pre-adolescents' internalizing symptoms, controlling for all confounders, indicating weaker protective effect of high household income on internalizing symptoms for African American than European pre-adolescents.

Conclusion: High household income is a more salient protective factor against internalizing symptoms of socially privileged European American pre-adolescents than of historically marginalized African Americans pre-adolescents. Elimination of internalizing behavioral gaps across racial groups requires more than equalizing socioeconomic status. Future research should study the moderating role of institutional and structural racism experienced by African American families across all income levels. Such research may explain why pre-adolescent African Americans with high household income remain at high risk of internalizing symptoms.

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