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Investigating the Health Consequences for White Americans Who Believe White Americans Are Wealthy
14
Citations
48
References
2020
Year
EthnicityRacial PrejudiceHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesPsychologySocial SciencesRaceGroup DisparitiesPoor Black AmericansHealth InequalityAfrican American StudiesHealth InequityRacial GroupPublic HealthWhite AmericansRacismMinority StressRacial EquitySocial IdentityHealth PolicyRacialization StudiesHealth ConsequencesHealth EconomicsSociologySocial EpidemiologyBlack AmericansHealth Disparity
Poor White Americans report feeling “worse off” than poor Black Americans despite the persistent negative effects of racism on Black Americans. Additionally, some health issues are rising among White but not Black Americans. Across two representative samples, we test whether White = wealthy stereotypes lead White Americans to feel relatively worse off than their racial group and whether these perceptions have health consequences. Across both samples, White Americans perceived their own status to be significantly lower than the status of the majority of White Americans. In contrast, Black Americans perceived their own status to be significantly higher than the majority of Black Americans. Critically, status comparisons between the self and one’s racial group predicted the experience of fewer positive emotions among White, but not Black, Americans, which mediated reduced mental and physical health. We conclude that race/class stereotypes may shape how poverty subjectively feels.
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