Gore Susan, Aseltine Robert H
Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Boston, 100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA 02125, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2003 Sep;44(3):370-89.
Young adulthood is a period of increased mental health risk, with evidence linking psychological disorder to problematic role transitions. To our knowledge, there has been little or no research that examines the forces shaping minority mental health at this time. Using a diverse, urban sample of young adults who are followed over a two-year period, this paper examines the link between race/ethnicity and depressed mood and the transitional roles and interpersonal experiences that mediate this association. Findings indicate that blacks and Hispanics have elevated depressed mood relative to whites and Asian Americans, independent of socioeconomic background factors. The underrepresentation of blacks and Hispanics in four-year colleges largely explains the differences in depressed mood between members of these groups and Asian American youth. In contrast, comparisons of black and Hispanic youth to white youth highlight problems in peer and parental relations among individuals in the former groups. Overall, findings suggest that the heightened depressed mood among Hispanics and blacks relative to whites and Asian Americans reflects their increasingly disadvantaged pathways into adulthood, characterized by poorer prospects for educational advancement and more problematic relationships subsequent to the high school years.
青年期是心理健康风险增加的时期,有证据表明心理障碍与有问题的角色转变有关。据我们所知,目前很少或没有研究探讨在这个时期塑造少数族裔心理健康的因素。本文以一个多样化的城市青年样本为研究对象,对他们进行了为期两年的跟踪调查,考察了种族/民族与抑郁情绪之间的联系,以及介导这种关联的过渡角色和人际经历。研究结果表明,与白人和亚裔美国人相比,黑人和西班牙裔的抑郁情绪更为严重,且不受社会经济背景因素的影响。黑人和西班牙裔在四年制大学中的代表性不足,这在很大程度上解释了这些群体与亚裔美国青年在抑郁情绪上的差异。相比之下,黑人和西班牙裔青年与白人青年的比较凸显了前一组人群在同伴和亲子关系方面存在的问题。总体而言,研究结果表明,与白人和亚裔美国人相比,西班牙裔和黑人中抑郁情绪加剧反映了他们步入成年期的道路越来越不利,其特点是教育进步的前景较差,高中毕业后的人际关系问题更多。