新冠肺炎应激和歧视对大学生心理弹性和心理健康影响的交叉检验

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Journal of American College Health Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-18 DOI:10.1080/07448481.2023.2249104
Laura C Reigada, Farnaz Kaighobadi, Erika Y Niwa, Tanzina Ahmed, Daniel J Carlson, Jacob Shane
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:采用交叉框架研究新冠肺炎应激和歧视对不同类型大学生心理健康的影响。参与者:从9个大学校园招募了1671名本科生(Mage = 20.42, SD = 2.74)。方法:参与者完成一份在线问卷,评估心理健康症状、covid - 19压力和校内歧视。通过层次回归和多组SEM路径分析来检验交叉身份之间的差异。结果:与男性相比,女性学生报告的新冠肺炎压力、焦虑和抑郁症状更高,适应能力更低。在某些少数民族学生群体中,covid - 19压力和歧视最高。使用交叉框架,几乎所有有色人种女性的新冠压力和歧视都与焦虑加剧有关。出乎意料的是,covid - 19压力预测了几乎所有男性交叉群体的焦虑症状。结论:调查结果重申了交叉框架,并强调了学生在性别和种族/民族方面如何经历covid - 19压力、歧视和心理健康结果方面的重大差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An intersectional examination of the impact of COVID-stress and discrimination on college students' resilience and mental health.

Objective: To investigate the impact of COVID-stress and discrimination on mental health among a group of diverse college students using an intersectional framework. Participants: One thousand six hundred seventy-one undergraduate students (Mage = 20.42, SD = 2.74) were recruited from nine college campuses. Methods: Participants completed an online questionnaire assessing mental health symptoms, COVID-stress, and in-school discrimination. Hierarchical regressions and multi-group SEM path analysis were conducted to examine differences across intersectional identities. Results: Female-identifying students reported higher COVID-stress, anxiety and depressive symptoms, and lower resilience compared to males. COVID-stress and discrimination were highest among certain minoritized student groups. Using an intersectional framework, more COVID-stress and discrimination were associated with increased anxiety for almost all women of color. Unexpectedly, COVID-stress predicted anxiety symptoms for almost all male intersectional groups. Conclusions: Findings reaffirm the intersectional framework and highlight significant disparities in how students experience COVID-stress, discrimination, and mental health outcomes along dimensions of gender and race/ethnicity.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
388
期刊介绍: Binge drinking, campus violence, eating disorders, sexual harassment: Today"s college students face challenges their parents never imagined. The Journal of American College Health, the only scholarly publication devoted entirely to college students" health, focuses on these issues, as well as use of tobacco and other drugs, sexual habits, psychological problems, and guns on campus, as well as the students... Published in cooperation with the American College Health Association, the Journal of American College Health is a must read for physicians, nurses, health educators, and administrators who are involved with students every day.
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