Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
955639 Social Science Research 2016 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examine depression, physical and emotional health as consequences of discrimination.•Models test the mediating role of self-esteem and increased structural awareness.•Using an intersectional approach, these models are tested among Black and White women.•Discrimination impacts health outcomes for both Black and White women in variant ways.•Indirect effects and within-group heterogeneity are discussed.

Despite a large body of research examining the impact of discrimination on health, the ways in which perceived discrimination may lead to disparate health outcomes through a sense of self and system consciousness is less understood. The current paper is concerned with both mental and physical health consequences of discrimination, as well as mediating pathways among African American and White women. Indirect effects analyses examine mediating paths from discrimination to health outcomes via structural awareness and self-esteem, using data from the Women's Life Path Study (N = 237). Our findings suggest that discrimination is both directly and indirectly associated with health outcomes for both Black and White women, mediated by individual (self-esteem) and group-level (structural awareness) processes. Evidence from this study indicates that discrimination is associated with heightened structural awareness, as well as lower self-esteem – both of which are related to poorer health. Discrimination negatively affected health across three domains, although the mechanisms varied somewhat for Black and White women. Broad implications of this research for interdisciplinary scholarship on the effects of discrimination on health and health disparities are discussed.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Social Psychology
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