AI Article Synopsis

  • The political climate's impact on Hispanic/Latino (HL) adolescents was examined before and after the 2020 U.S. presidential election, highlighting the volatility associated with new leadership.
  • The study, conducted in Los Angeles and Miami with a sample of 304 HL adolescents, assessed perceived negative political climate and its relationship with depressive symptoms, anxiety, and substance use.
  • Findings revealed that negative political climate increased in Miami and among Cuban-origin adolescents post-election, underscoring the need to understand variations in political stressors as they relate to mental health disparities in HL youth.

Article Abstract

The political climate often changes following the installment of a new president. This volatility presents opportunities for examining how elections might affect vulnerable subgroups such as Hispanic/Latino (HL) adolescents. The present study explored the perception of negative political climate among HL adolescents before and after the 2020 U.S. presidential election and its association with internalizing symptoms and substance use. We conducted the study in Los Angeles and Miami between 2020-2021, with a sample of 304 HL adolescents (Females = 60.8%), aged 15.3 years on average. Participants completed measures of negative political climate (pre- post-election) and measures of depressive symptoms, anxiety, substance misuse, and substance use intentions after the election. We used paired tests and linear mixed-effects modeling to explore changes in perceived negative climate before and after the election. Structural equation modeling was used to determine predictors of negative political climate and its associations with internalizing symptoms and substance use. Results indicated that following the election negative political climate increased significantly in Miami and among Cuban-origin adolescents but not in Los Angeles or among Mexican-origin adolescents. Pre-election perceived negative political climate was significantly predicted by gender, study site, and mother's nativity. Pre-election negative political climate predicted post-election internalizing symptoms and substance use intentions indirectly through post-election negative political climate. HL youth's perceived political climate is a complex construct that might vary across different sociopolitical contexts and populational sub-groups. Exploring variations in politically-based cultural stressors and their role as mental health and substance use risk factors is crucial to addressing HL disparities. KEY WORDS: Adolescence, Hispanic/Latino, political climate, presidential election, internalizing symptoms, substance use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10121197PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2023.101790DOI Listing

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