Racial discrimination stress, coping, and depressive symptoms among Asian Americans: A moderation analysis. |
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Authors: | Wei, Meifen Heppner, P. Paul Ku, Tsun-Yao Liao, Kelly Yu-Hsin |
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Abstract: | The purpose of our study was to explore: (a) the association between racial discrimination stress and depressive symptoms, and (b) how coping (e.g., individualistic/collectivistic and dispositional/situation-specific coping) attenuated or strengthened this association specifically among Asian Americans. Data were collected from 201 Asian Americans in a large Midwestern state university through an online survey. Results from a hierarchical regression indicated that racial discrimination stress significantly predicted depressive symptoms over and beyond perceived general stress and perceived racial discrimination. For the moderation effect, the simple effect analyses indicated that low utilization of reactive coping strategies and a high helpfulness rating of family support reduced the strength of association between racial discrimination stress and depressive symptoms. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | Asian Americans coping depressive symptoms moderation racial discrimination stress |
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