Clark Rodney
Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202, USA.
Health Psychol. 2006 Jan;25(1):20-5. doi: 10.1037/0278-6133.25.1.20.
This quasi-experimental study explored the association of perceived racism and seeking social support to vascular reactivity in a college sample of 110 Black women. Perceived racism and seeking social support were assessed via self-report, and vascular reactivity was measured before and during a standardized speaking task. Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that perceived racism was positively related to changes in systolic blood pressure. These analyses also indicated that seeking social support moderated the relationship between perceived racism and systolic blood pressure changes. This interaction effect persisted after controlling for several potential confounders. Follow-up regression analyses showed that perceived racism was positively associated with reactivity among participants who were low in seeking social support. A significant relationship was not observed between perceived racism and systolic blood pressure changes among participants who were high in seeking social support. Perceived racism and seeking social support were not significantly associated with changes in diastolic blood pressure. These findings highlight the importance of examining psychosocial factors that may mitigate the hypothesized relationship between perceived racism and reactivity.
这项准实验研究在110名黑人女性的大学样本中,探讨了感知到的种族主义和寻求社会支持与血管反应性之间的关联。通过自我报告评估感知到的种族主义和寻求社会支持情况,并在标准化演讲任务之前和期间测量血管反应性。分层回归分析表明,感知到的种族主义与收缩压变化呈正相关。这些分析还表明,寻求社会支持调节了感知到的种族主义与收缩压变化之间的关系。在控制了几个潜在的混杂因素后,这种交互作用仍然存在。后续回归分析表明,在寻求社会支持较少的参与者中,感知到的种族主义与反应性呈正相关。在寻求社会支持较多的参与者中,未观察到感知到的种族主义与收缩压变化之间存在显著关系。感知到的种族主义和寻求社会支持与舒张压变化无显著关联。这些发现凸显了研究可能减轻感知到的种族主义与反应性之间假设关系的心理社会因素的重要性。