학술논문

When Discrimination Hurts: The Longitudinal Impact of Increases in Peer Discrimination on Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms in Mexican-origin Youth
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 48(5)
Subject
Clinical and Health Psychology
Psychology
Clinical Research
Depression
Pediatric
Mental Health
Behavioral and Social Science
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Anxiety
Female
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Mexican Americans
Models
Psychological
Peer Group
Psychology
Adolescent
Racism
Risk Factors
Internalizing
Latinx
Peer discrimination
Specialist Studies in Education
Developmental & Child Psychology
Applied and developmental psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Social and personality psychology
Language
Abstract
Life course models of the impact of discrimination on health and mental health outcomes posit that the pernicious effects of discrimination may not be immediate, but instead may become apparent at later stages in development. This study tests whether peer discrimination changes at particular transition points (i.e., transition to middle and high school) predict subsequent internalizing symptoms in Mexican-origin youth. In a sample of 674 Mexican-origin youth (50% female), this study used a latent change score framework to model changes in peer discrimination across time and to test whether changes in peer discrimination at 7th and 9th grades predicted greater depressive and anxiety symptoms in 12th grade controlling for 5th grade symptoms. Irrespective of longitudinal changes, greater peer discrimination in 5th grade predicted greater depressive and anxiety symptoms in 12th grade. Further, significant increases in peer discrimination from 7th to 8th grade and in 9th to 10th grade uniquely predicted greater anxiety symptoms in 12th grade. These findings suggest that longitudinal research on peer discrimination needs to take into account unique periods of risk. Future research implications are discussed.