Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2020 Aug;7(4):619-629. doi: 10.1007/s40615-019-00692-8. Epub 2020 Jan 29.
While disparities in depressive symptoms by race/ethnicity and gender have been documented, left unclear is how such status characteristics intersect to influence mental health, particularly across early life and among a diverse set of population subgroups. This study investigates how intra- and inter-individual trends in depressive symptoms unfold across a 30-year span (ages 12-42) and are structured by the intersection of race/ethnicity and gender among White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian American young adults (N = 18,566). Analyses use data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, a nationally representative study of adolescents who have been followed through their fourth decade of life. We draw on Waves I-IV and a representative subsample of the brand new Wave V data. Growth curve models indicated depressive symptoms decreased across adolescence and young adulthood before increasing in the early 30s. Racial/ethnic minorities reported more depressive symptoms than Whites. Women reported more depressive symptoms than men and experienced especially steep increases in their late 30s. Racial/ethnic-gender disparities remained stable with age, except for Hispanic-White disparities among women and Asian American-White disparities among men, which narrowed with age. Overall, findings demonstrate dynamic inequalities across a longer period of the life span than was previously known, as well as heterogeneity in trajectories of poor mental health within and between racial/ethnic-gender groups. Results also suggest that Black and Asian American women experience the highest mental health risks and that interventions for reducing disparities in depressive symptoms should focus on adults in their late 20s/early 30s, particularly women of color.
虽然种族/民族和性别差异与抑郁症状有关,但仍不清楚这些社会地位特征如何相互交叉影响心理健康,尤其是在整个生命周期中以及在多样化的人群亚组中。本研究调查了抑郁症状在 30 年跨度内(12-42 岁)的个体内和个体间趋势如何展开,以及种族/民族和性别交叉如何影响白种人、黑种人、西班牙裔和亚裔美国人青年成年人(N=18566)的心理健康。分析使用了来自国家青少年健康纵向研究的数据,这是一项对青少年进行的全国代表性研究,这些青少年已经被跟踪到他们的第四个十年的生活。我们借鉴了第一至第四波数据以及全新的第五波数据的代表性子样本。增长曲线模型表明,抑郁症状在青少年和青年早期逐渐下降,然后在 30 岁出头开始增加。少数民族比白人报告更多的抑郁症状。女性比男性报告更多的抑郁症状,并且在 30 多岁后期经历了特别陡峭的增长。种族/民族-性别差异随着年龄的增长而保持稳定,除了女性中的西班牙裔-白人和男性中的亚裔-白种人之间的差异随着年龄的增长而缩小。总的来说,研究结果表明,与以前已知的相比,在更长的生命周期中存在动态的不平等,以及在种族/民族-性别群体内部和之间的不良心理健康轨迹存在异质性。研究结果还表明,黑人和亚裔美国女性面临最高的心理健康风险,减少抑郁症状差异的干预措施应针对 20 多岁/30 多岁的成年人,特别是有色人种女性。