1. Perceptions of peer mental health: impact of race and student-athlete status.
- Author
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Tran, Alisia G. T. T., Eustice, Kristi L., Mintert, Jeffrey S., Lam, Christina K., and Holzapfel, Jenny
- Subjects
COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,AFFINITY groups ,PSYCHOLOGY of athletes ,HEALTH occupations students ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,SENSORY perception ,STEREOTYPES ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,RACE relations ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Objective: This study used a multi-faceted methodological approach to examine if peer perceptions of stereotyped student groups' mental health needs varied by target race and student-athlete status. Participants: In Study 1, 502 university students completed an online experiment. Study 2 data were drawn from the American College Health Association (ACHA)-National College Health Assessment (N = 65,167) and Healthy Minds Study (N = 43,487). Methods: Study 1 participants rated the severity of various mental health concerns for Black non-student-athletes, White non-student-athletes, Black student-athletes, or White student-athletes. Study 2 conceptualized peer perceptions vis-à-vis mental health patterns in national data. Results: Study 1 generally revealed lower perceived severity of mental health concerns for Black non-student-athletes. In contrast, Study 2 patterns revealed more variations across student status groups, including that Black non-student-athletes exhibited relatively high prevalence rates of numerous mental health concerns. Conclusions: Results may suggest mental health under-/over-pathologizing, with implications for training and peer-to-peer mental health interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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