University of Southern California, Los Angeles.
University of California, Los Angeles.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2022 Oct;61(10):1251-1261. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2022.04.015. Epub 2022 May 2.
Despite evidence linking experiences of racial discrimination by Black parents and problem behaviors in youth, little is known about the mechanisms that explain this link. To elucidate these developmental pathways, a serial mediation model was tested, in which Black parents' experiences of racial discrimination were hypothesized to predict increased parental depression and parent-child conflict in early adolescence, which in turn would be associated with youth depression, anxiety, and conduct problems in early to mid-adolescence.
Participants were 252 Black parent-child dyads. Youth (56% female) were on average 11.98 years old at study entry (wave 1). Parents and youth completed questionnaires during a home-based assessment at wave 1 and were assessed again 1 and 2 years later (waves 2 and 3).
Black parents' experiences of racial discrimination at wave 1 were linked to higher levels of parent-child conflict at wave 2 (0.20; 95% CI [0.05, 0.33]), which in turn predicted greater youth-reported depression at wave 3 (0.30; 95% CI [0.15, 0.47]). There was a significant indirect effect of racial discrimination on youth-reported depression via parent-child conflict (indirect effect: 0.06, 95% CI [0.02, 0.10]). Findings were replicated across multiple outcomes (ie, depression, anxiety, conduct problems) and multiple informants (ie, youth report, parent report). There was no evidence to support a serial mediation model via parental depression and then parent-child conflict.
This study identified a developmental pathway from Black parents' experiences of racial discrimination to adolescent problem behaviors via parent-child conflict. Findings may inform interventions aimed at promoting resilience in parents and youth faced with pervasive racism.
Substance Use Screening and Prevention for Adolescents in Pediatric Primary Care (SKY); https://clinicaltrials.gov/; NCT03074877.
尽管有证据表明黑人工厂经历种族歧视与年轻人的行为问题有关,但对于解释这种联系的机制知之甚少。为了阐明这些发展途径,测试了一个串联中介模型,其中假设黑人工厂家长经历种族歧视会预测他们在青少年早期出现更多的抑郁和亲子冲突,而这反过来又与青少年在青少年中期的抑郁、焦虑和行为问题有关。
参与者为 252 对黑人工厂父母-子女二人组。青年(56%为女性)在研究开始时平均年龄为 11.98 岁(第 1 波)。父母和青年在第 1 波的家庭评估中完成了问卷调查,并在 1 年后和 2 年后(第 2 波和第 3 波)再次接受评估。
第 1 波黑人工厂父母经历种族歧视与第 2 波亲子冲突水平较高有关(0.20;95%置信区间[0.05,0.33]),而亲子冲突反过来又预测了更大的青少年报告的第 3 波抑郁(0.30;95%置信区间[0.15,0.47])。在亲子冲突中,种族歧视对青少年报告的抑郁有显著的间接影响(间接效应:0.06,95%置信区间[0.02,0.10])。这些发现通过多种结果(即抑郁、焦虑、行为问题)和多个信息来源(即青少年报告、父母报告)得到了复制。没有证据支持通过父母抑郁再到亲子冲突的串联中介模型。
本研究确定了一条从黑人工厂父母经历种族歧视到青少年行为问题的发展途径,即通过亲子冲突。研究结果可能为针对面临普遍种族主义的父母和青少年的干预措施提供信息。
青少年儿科初级保健中的物质使用筛查和预防(SKY);https://clinicaltrials.gov/;NCT03074877。