Takeuchi D T, Speechley K N
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 1989 Nov;24(6):288-94. doi: 10.1007/BF01788031.
This paper examines the relationship between marital status, as a measure of social support, and psychological distress among three ethnic minorities (Japanese Americans, Filipino Americans, and Native Hawaiians) and Caucasians in Hawai'i. A secondary analysis is conducted on survey data collected from a statewide sample of adults. The analyses show that the relationship between marital status and distress conforms to expectations among Caucasians: married adults have a lower level of distress than the non-married. However, the marital status and distress relationship is not consistent across ethnic minorities. We discuss the implications of these findings to the study of social support and distress among ethnic minorities.
本文考察了作为社会支持衡量指标的婚姻状况与夏威夷三个少数民族(日裔美国人、菲律宾裔美国人和夏威夷原住民)以及白种人心理困扰之间的关系。对从全州范围内的成年人样本收集的调查数据进行了二次分析。分析表明,婚姻状况与困扰之间的关系符合白种人的预期:已婚成年人的困扰程度低于未婚者。然而,婚姻状况与困扰之间的关系在少数民族中并不一致。我们讨论了这些研究结果对少数民族社会支持与困扰研究的意义。