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Coping with intergenerational family conflict: Comparison of Asian American, Hispanic, and European American college students.
Authors:Lee, Richard M.   Liu, Hsin-Tine Tina
Abstract:
Using a stress-coping framework, the authors examined indirect and direct coping strategies as potential mediators in the relationship between intergenerational family conflict and psychological distress in Asian American, Hispanic, and European American college students. Asian American college students reported the highest likelihood of family conflict. Students from all cultural groups also used direct coping slightly more often than they did indirect coping. Only indirect coping mediated the effect of family conflict on distress for Asian Americans and European Americans, but it did so in the opposite direction than hypothesized. For these two cultural groups, indirect coping fully accounted for the variance shared between family conflict and psychological distress. For Hispanics, indirect coping partially mediated the effect of family conflict on psychological distress. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:indirect coping strategies   direct coping strategies   intergenerational family conflict   psychological distress   Asian Americans   Hispanics   European Americans   cultural differences
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