1. Interactive Relations Across Dimensions of Interpersonal-Level Discrimination and Depressive Symptoms to Carotid Intimal-Medial Thickening in African Americans
- Author
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Shari R. Waldstein, Carrington R. Wendell, Danielle L. Beatty Moody, Michele K. Evans, Alan B. Zonderman, Daniel K. Leibel, and Elizabeth J. Pantesco
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Disease ,Interpersonal communication ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,Article ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Interpersonal Relations ,Stroke ,Applied Psychology ,Subclinical infection ,Depression ,business.industry ,Multilevel model ,Social Discrimination ,Middle Aged ,Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,030227 psychiatry ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Psychological Distance ,Household income ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography ,Social status - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to examine within-race interactions of multiple dimensions of self-reported discrimination with depressive symptoms in relation to carotid intimal-medial thickness (IMT), a subclinical marker of atherosclerosis prospectively implicated in stroke incidence, in middle-aged to older African American and white adults. METHODS: Participants were a socioeconomically diverse group of 1941 African Americans (56.5%) and whites from the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity across the Life Span study (30–64 years old, 47% men, 45.2% with household income
- Published
- 2019
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