Health Professions Department, School of Nursing and Health Professions, University of San Francisco, 2130 Fulton Street, San Francisco, CA 94117, USA.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90033, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Feb 14;19(4):2117. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19042117.
Minority students experience more discrimination on college campuses, yet little is known about fear of discrimination. This paper (a) establishes a new measure, fear of discriminatory violence, (b) assesses sociodemographic correlates of fear of discriminatory violence, and (c) estimates the effect of fear of discriminatory violence on anxiety and depression. A cross-sectional study using online surveys was undertaken among college students. A zero-inflated negative binomial model estimated the association between sociodemographics and fear of discriminatory violence. Multiple logistic regression models estimated the association between fear of discriminatory violence and anxiety/depression. Fear of discriminatory violence was higher among Black (ME: 11.9, < 0.0001), Hispanic (ME: 5.9, < 0.0001), Middle Eastern (ME: 5.4, = 0.03), Asian (ME: 4.9, < 0.0001), and multiracial (ME: 2.9, < 0.0001) students compared with White students; transgender/gender non-conforming (ME: 7.2, = 0.01) and female (ME: 3.4, < 0.0001) students compared with male students; and gay (ME: 10.7, < 0.0001), lesbian (ME: 9.0, = 0.01), and bisexual students (ME: 3.4, = 0.001) as well as those with a sexual orientation not included (ME: 5.5, = 0.001), compared with heterosexual students. Increasing fear of discriminatory violence was associated with increased odds of anxiety (AOR: 1.04; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.06) and depression (AOR: 1.03; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.05). This understudied public health issue should be addressed to prevent fear of discriminatory violence and the resulting mental health consequences among college populations.
少数民族学生在大学校园里经历更多的歧视,但对歧视恐惧知之甚少。本文(a)建立了一个新的测量工具,即对歧视性暴力的恐惧,(b)评估了对歧视性暴力恐惧的社会人口学相关因素,以及(c)估计了对歧视性暴力恐惧对焦虑和抑郁的影响。本研究采用在线调查的横断面研究,利用零膨胀负二项模型估计社会人口学因素与对歧视性暴力恐惧的关联。利用多变量逻辑回归模型估计对歧视性暴力恐惧与焦虑/抑郁的关联。与白人学生相比,黑人(ME:11.9,<0.0001)、西班牙裔(ME:5.9,<0.0001)、中东裔(ME:5.4,=0.03)、亚裔(ME:4.9,<0.0001)和多种族裔(ME:2.9,<0.0001)学生的对歧视性暴力恐惧程度更高;跨性别/性别不符合(ME:7.2,=0.01)和女性(ME:3.4,<0.0001)学生比男性学生的对歧视性暴力恐惧程度更高;同性恋(ME:10.7,<0.0001)、女同性恋(ME:9.0,=0.01)和双性恋学生(ME:3.4,=0.001)以及性取向未被包含的学生(ME:5.5,=0.001)比异性恋学生的对歧视性暴力恐惧程度更高。对歧视性暴力恐惧的增加与焦虑(AOR:1.04;95% CI:1.02,1.06)和抑郁(AOR:1.03;95% CI:1.02,1.05)的几率增加相关。这个研究较少的公共卫生问题应该得到解决,以防止大学校园人群对歧视性暴力的恐惧和由此产生的心理健康后果。