Publication | Closed Access
Race/ethnicity, acculturation, and psychological distress: Fatalism and religiosity as cultural resources
198
Citations
47
References
1993
Year
EthnicityReligiosityEducationCultural FactorHealth PsychologyMental HealthPsychologyRaceObserved DifferencesLatino CultureLatino/a StudiesReligious PrejudiceReligion StudiesAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenMinority StressEthnic DiscriminationFamily RelationshipsPsychological DistressPsychiatryCultural ResourcesDepressionMultilevel ModelingPsychosocial ResearchCultureAcculturation Level DifferencesAcculturation Level SubgroupsCross-cultural PerspectiveCultural PsychiatryMedicineCultural AnthropologyImmigrant HealthCultural Psychology
Data from a community sample of 1,784 Anglo, African-American, and Mexican-American adults were examined to assess: (1) the nature and magnitude of observed racial/ethnic and acculturation level differences in depression, (2) the relative contribution of sociodemographic and psychosocial factors (fatalism and religiosity) to observed differences, and (3) the joint effects of fatalism and religiosity as sociocultural resources with regard to depression in differing racial/ethnic and acculturation level subgroups. Analyses indicate the most dramatic differences in depression among males—African Americans were roughly similar to Anglos and levels of depression were significantly higher among the least acculturated Mexican Americans relative to Anglos, even after statistical controls. Acculturation level differences among Mexican-American females were explained by statistical controls. Lower levels of depression among more highly acculturated than among less acculturated Mexican Americans provide little support for a simplistic stress formulation of acculturation. Rather, the interplay of acculturation, fatalism, and religiosity supports a more complex cultural marginality model, emphasizing the consistency of attitudinal elements and language use as facilitators or inhibitors of assimilation into Anglo culture. Both those who successfully acculturate and those who are most insulated in traditional culture appear least depressed from this perspective.
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