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Interpersonal discrimination and depressive symptomatology: examination of several personality-related characteristics as potential confounders in a racial/ethnic heterogeneous adult sample

Authors :
Katherine King
Haslyn E. R. Hunte
Tené T. Lewis
Hedwig Lee
Margaret T. Hicken
Source :
BMC Public Health
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2013.

Abstract

Background Research suggests that reports of interpersonal discrimination result in poor mental health. Because personality characteristics may either confound or mediate the link between these reports and mental health, there is a need to disentangle its role in order to better understand the nature of discrimination-mental health association. We examined whether hostility, anger repression and expression, pessimism, optimism, and self-esteem served as confounders in the association between perceived interpersonal discrimination and CESD-based depressive symptoms in a race/ethnic heterogeneous probability-based sample of community-dwelling adults. Methods We employed a series of ordinary least squares regression analyses to examine the potential confounding effect of hostility, anger repression and expression, pessimism, optimism, and self-esteem between interpersonal discrimination and depressive symptoms. Results Hostility, anger repression, pessimism and self-esteem were significant as possible confounders of the relationship between interpersonal discrimination and depressive symptoms, together accounting for approximately 38% of the total association (beta: 0.1892, p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712458
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Public Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....53ef3d6bbb05814a59c47b240d143789