The role of discrimination and acculturative stress in the physical health of Mexican-origin adults
Article
Finch, BK, Hummer, RA, Kolody, B et al. (2001). The role of discrimination and acculturative stress in the physical health of Mexican-origin adults
. HISPANIC JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 23(4), 399-429. 10.1177/0739986301234004
Finch, BK, Hummer, RA, Kolody, B et al. (2001). The role of discrimination and acculturative stress in the physical health of Mexican-origin adults
. HISPANIC JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 23(4), 399-429. 10.1177/0739986301234004
The authors propose that perceived discrimination has an effect on self-reported health statuses, which are known to affect future morbidity and mortality. A sample of 3,012 Mexican-origin adults from the Mexican American Prevalence and Services Study in California is utilized to test this hypothesis. Dependent variables include a self-rating of health and a count of self-reported chronic conditions; the key independent variable is a scale of overall discrimination specific to one's Mexican origin. Results indicate that discrimination is related to poor physical health - net of controls for acculturation stress, national heritage, sociodemographic variables, and social support. Depression is identified as a major mechanism through which discrimination may affect physical health. Notably, job market stress/discrimination has a very strong association with poorer physical health, net of depression. Individual-level effects of discrimination found in this study, as well as institutional-level conditions and contextual effects, should be treated as crucial to future studies of individual-level physical health differentials.