State of the Art

Alexis C. Dennis
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Abstract

While the socioeconomic status (SES)–psychological distress gradient is well-documented in the social science literature, less attention has been devoted to how this relationship varies within sociodemographic subgroups. I contribute to this small but growing literature by first examining the relationship between multiple dimensions of SES and two measures of psychological distress (depression and anxiety) among working-age African Americans. I then test whether three social mediators explain the SES–psychological distress relationship, and whether gendermodifies these associations and/or the social mediators that shape them. To address these aims, I analyze twowaves of population-representative data from theDetroit Neighborhood Health Study (N=685). Data were collected between 2008 and 2010 in the wake of the Great Recession. I utilize structural equation modeling with latent variables to assess these relationships, and test indirect and conditional effects to detect the presence of mediation and/or moderation, respectively. Findings revealed associations between higher total household income and lower levels of depression/anxiety, as well as unemployment and increased depression/anxiety among working-age African Americans. Furthermore, higher educational attainment was associated with reduced anxiety, but not depression, in this population. Gender moderated these findings such that unemployment was associated with higher levels of depression/anxiety among women but not men. I also found that trauma mediated the relationship between unemployment and depression/anxiety as well as educational attainment and anxiety. Gender, however, moderated the association between unemployment and depression/anxiety via traumatic events such that the relationship was stronger among women than men. Collectively, these findings contribute to our limited understanding of African Americans’ mental health and underscore the importance of how both socioeconomic forces and life course experiences with traumatic events contribute to poor mental health among this population.
技术现状
虽然社会经济地位(SES) -心理困扰梯度在社会科学文献中有充分的记录,但很少有人关注这种关系在社会人口亚群体中的变化。我首先研究了社会经济地位的多个维度与工作年龄的非裔美国人的两种心理困扰(抑郁和焦虑)之间的关系,从而为这一数量不多但不断增长的文献做出了贡献。然后,我测试了三个社会中介是否解释了ses -心理困扰关系,以及性别是否改变了这些关联和/或塑造它们的社会中介。为了实现这些目标,我分析了来自底特律社区健康研究(N=685)的两波人口代表性数据。数据是在2008年至2010年大衰退之后收集的。我利用带有潜在变量的结构方程模型来评估这些关系,并分别测试间接和条件效应来检测中介和/或调节的存在。研究结果显示,在工作年龄的非裔美国人中,家庭总收入越高,抑郁/焦虑水平越低,失业率越高,抑郁/焦虑水平越高。此外,在这一人群中,较高的教育程度与焦虑减少有关,但与抑郁无关。性别缓和了这些发现,例如失业与女性较高的抑郁/焦虑水平相关,而与男性无关。我还发现创伤在失业和抑郁/焦虑以及受教育程度和焦虑之间起到中介作用。然而,性别通过创伤性事件缓和了失业和抑郁/焦虑之间的联系,因此这种关系在女性中比男性更强。总的来说,这些发现有助于我们对非裔美国人心理健康的有限理解,并强调了社会经济力量和创伤事件的生命历程经历如何导致该人群心理健康状况不佳的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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