AI Article Synopsis

  • Black adolescents often experience everyday racism, which negatively impacts their health and well-being, leading to heightened anticipatory stress responses related to future experiences of racism.
  • A study with 442 participants examined how individual, institutional, and cultural racism affected these stress responses and how different dimensions of racial identity (centrality, private regard, public regard) moderated the relationship.
  • Findings showed that higher experiences of racism correlated with increased stress responses, with variations based on racial identity, suggesting that having a strong racial identity may help alleviate some negative effects of racism.

Article Abstract

Black adolescents face the stressful experience of racism in their everyday lives, which has negative implications for their health and well-being. In the current study, we explored experiences of individual, institutional, and cultural racism in relation to anticipatory racism-related stress responses (e.g., prolonged negative thinking, arousal in expectation of future racism) among Black adolescents ( = 442). We also examined whether three dimensions of racial identity, centrality, private regard, and public regard, moderate those relationships. We found that more experiences of racism at each level were related to greater anticipatory racism-related stress responses, measured as more cognitive activation of racial stressors, appraisal of coping strategies, and anticipation of future racism. We also found that some relationships between experiences of racism and anticipatory stress varied by regard. The positive relation between individual racism and perseverative cognition was stronger for those with low public regard. Similarly, the positive association between cultural racism and psychological anticipation was stronger for those with low public regard. The positive association between institutional racism and physiological anticipation of future racism was stronger for those with higher private regard. These findings contribute to the growing literature on the pervasiveness of racism in the lives of Black youth and the utility of racial identity to reduce harm from racism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/ort0000547DOI Listing

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