Publication | Open Access
Racial and cultural factors affecting the mental health of Asian Americans.
78
Citations
53
References
2011
Year
EthnicityEducationCultural FactorSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthPsychologyRaceAfrican American StudiesCultural FactorsPublic HealthMinority StressPsychiatryPsychosocial FactorBicultural Self-efficacyAsian AmericansCultureCross-cultural AssessmentCross-cultural PerspectiveHealth BehaviorCultural PsychiatryAdult Mental HealthCultural PredictorsImmigrant HealthCultural Psychology
In this study, we employed structural equation modeling to test the degree to which racism-related stress, acculturative stress, and bicultural self-efficacy were predictive of mental health in a predominantly community-based sample of 367 Asian American adults. We also tested whether bicultural self-efficacy moderated the relationship between acculturative stress and mental health. Finally, we examined whether generational status moderated the impact of racial and cultural predictors of mental health by testing our model across immigrant and U.S.-born samples. Results indicated that our hypothesized structural model represented a good fit to the total sample data. While racism-related stress, acculturative stress, and bicultural self-efficacy were significant predictors of mental health in the total sample analyses, our generational analyses revealed a differential predictive pattern across generational status. Finally, we found that the buffering effect of bicultural self-efficacy on the relationship between acculturative stress and mental health was significant for U.S.-born individuals only. Implications for research and service delivery are explored.
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