Department of Educational Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1040 W. Harrison St., Chicago, IL, 60607, USA.
Chicago Center for HIV Elimination, The University of Chicago Medicine, 5837 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL, 60637, USA.
J Adolesc. 2019 Aug;75:138-150. doi: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2019.07.012. Epub 2019 Aug 6.
Youth of color (e.g., Black/African American and Latinx/Hispanic) are overrepresented in the juvenile justice system and experience greater health disparities compared to non-Hispanic White youth. Ethnic/racial discrimination (ERD) is a risk marker for poor mental health and behavioral outcomes among youth of color, and traumatic stress and emotion dysregulation have been implicated in these pathways. Despite the relevance of these factors for justice-involved youth of color, understanding of their interrelations within this demographic is lacking.
Participants were 173 recently arrested adolescents (86% African American; 45% girls; ages 13-18) on probation in a large Midwest city in the United States. Participants completed surveys assessing ERD, traumatic stress, emotion dysregulation, internalizing symptoms, and externalizing behaviors. Using linear regression and path analysis, this study tested the cross-sectional links among two types of ERD (i.e., interpersonal experiences and perceptions of group experiences), traumatic stress symptoms, emotion dysregulation, and internalizing symptoms and externalizing behaviors.
Interpersonal ERD (e.g., hearing racial insults) was associated with increased internalizing symptoms and externalizing behaviors; for internalizing symptoms, the relation was stronger for girls than boys. Gender differences were partially accounted for by traumatic stress symptoms and emotion dysregulation.
This study offers new insights into ERD experiences among juvenile justice-involved youth of color, gender differences in ethnic/racial discrimination experiences, and the potential value of gender-sensitive and culturally responsive programming in strengthening youths' ability to cope with ERD.
有色人种青年(例如,非裔美国人和拉丁裔/西班牙裔)在少年司法系统中比例过高,与非西班牙裔白人青年相比,他们面临更大的健康差距。种族/民族歧视(ERD)是非裔美国青年和拉丁裔青年心理健康和行为结果不良的风险因素,创伤性应激和情绪调节障碍与这些途径有关。尽管这些因素与涉及司法的有色人种青年有关,但对这一人群中这些因素的相互关系的理解还很缺乏。
本研究参与者为在美国中西部一个大城市中缓刑中的 173 名最近被捕的青少年(86%为非裔美国人;45%为女性;年龄 13-18 岁)。参与者完成了评估 ERD、创伤性应激、情绪调节障碍、内化症状和外化行为的问卷调查。本研究使用线性回归和路径分析,检验了两种 ERD(即人际经历和群体经历的看法)、创伤性应激症状、情绪调节障碍与内化症状和外化行为之间的横断面联系。
人际 ERD(例如,听到种族侮辱)与内化症状和外化行为增加有关;对于内化症状,女性的相关性强于男性。性别差异部分由创伤性应激症状和情绪调节障碍解释。
本研究为涉及司法的有色人种青年的 ERD 经历、种族/民族歧视经历中的性别差异,以及增强年轻人应对 ERD 的能力的性别敏感和文化响应计划的潜在价值提供了新的见解。