1. Ethnic Discrimination and Self-rated Health among Hispanic Emerging Adults: Examining the Moderating Effects of Self-esteem and Resilience.
- Author
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Cano, Miguel, Castro, Felipe, Benner, Aprile, Molina, Kristine, Schwartz, Seth, Higashi, Robin, Lee, MinJae, Vaughan, Ellen, Bursac, Zoran, Cepeda, Alice, Valdez, Avelardo, Rojas, Patria, De La Rosa, Mario, Alonso, Betty, Zvolensky, Michael, and de Dios, Marcel
- Subjects
Latino ,coping ,cultural stress ,perceived health ,racism ,stress - Abstract
Exposure to ethnic discrimination has been conceptualized as a sociocultural stressor that is associated with lower self-rated health. However, this association remains understudied among Hispanics and less is known about constructs that may mitigate the effects of ethnic discrimination on self-rated health. Accordingly, this study aimed to (a) examine the association between ethnic discrimination and self-rated health among Hispanic emerging adults (ages 18-25), and (b) examine the extent to which self-esteem and resilience may moderate this association. A convenience sample of 200 Hispanic emerging adults from Arizona (n=99) and Florida (n=101) was recruited to complete a cross-sectional survey. Data were analyzed using hierarchical multiple regression and moderation analyses. Results indicate that higher ethnic discrimination was associated with lower self-rated health. Moderation analyses indicated that self-esteem functioned as a moderator that weakened the association between ethnic discrimination and self-rated health; however, resilience did not function similarly as a moderator. This study adds to the limited literature on ethnic discrimination and self-rated health among Hispanics and highlights that psychological factors, such as enhancing self-esteem, may help buffer the adverse effects of ethnic discrimination on health outcomes.
- Published
- 2023