Amidst increasing focus on rising rates of substance abuse and suicide among white Americans and extending prior research on intergroup attitudes and health, this study examines a novel factor associated with psychological distress: disagreement with multiculturalism. Using the Portraits of American Life Study (N = 2,292), logistic regressions indicate that for Whites and Hispanics, increased likelihood of psychological distress (depression, hopelessness and worthlessness) is associated with stronger disagreement with multiculturalism, measured as "If we want to create a society where people get along, we must recognize that each ethnic group has the right to maintain its own unique traditions." For Blacks, however, attitudes toward multicu...
The influence of racial differences on perceived psychological distress and impairment was examined ...
There is a wealth of research indicating that members of minority groups (e.g. according to race/eth...
The research described in this dissertation explores the impact of cultural definitions of mental he...
Amidst increasing focus on rising rates of substance abuse and suicide among white Americans and ext...
As the Latino population increases in the United States, mental health professionals encounter mixed...
As the Latino population increases in the United States, mental health professionals encounter mixed...
The purpose of this research is to determine the relationships among race, socioeconomic status (SES...
Research indicates grave underutilization of mental health services among racial/ethnic minorities (...
Culture shapes how an individual experiences, understands, expresses, and addresses emotional and me...
Research suggests that ethnic/racial, gender, and sexual minorities experience more psychological di...
Ethnic group discrimination represents a notable risk factor that may contribute to mental health pr...
Prior research suggests that cultural differences in expressions of emotional distress complicate cr...
People with mental illness are often stereotyped as dangerous, unstable, or unreliable, and these st...
Background: The Theory of Cultural Distress offers a framework for understanding the potential outco...
Background: For psychiatric disorders, comorbidity is a rule rather than exception. Thus it is parti...
The influence of racial differences on perceived psychological distress and impairment was examined ...
There is a wealth of research indicating that members of minority groups (e.g. according to race/eth...
The research described in this dissertation explores the impact of cultural definitions of mental he...
Amidst increasing focus on rising rates of substance abuse and suicide among white Americans and ext...
As the Latino population increases in the United States, mental health professionals encounter mixed...
As the Latino population increases in the United States, mental health professionals encounter mixed...
The purpose of this research is to determine the relationships among race, socioeconomic status (SES...
Research indicates grave underutilization of mental health services among racial/ethnic minorities (...
Culture shapes how an individual experiences, understands, expresses, and addresses emotional and me...
Research suggests that ethnic/racial, gender, and sexual minorities experience more psychological di...
Ethnic group discrimination represents a notable risk factor that may contribute to mental health pr...
Prior research suggests that cultural differences in expressions of emotional distress complicate cr...
People with mental illness are often stereotyped as dangerous, unstable, or unreliable, and these st...
Background: The Theory of Cultural Distress offers a framework for understanding the potential outco...
Background: For psychiatric disorders, comorbidity is a rule rather than exception. Thus it is parti...
The influence of racial differences on perceived psychological distress and impairment was examined ...
There is a wealth of research indicating that members of minority groups (e.g. according to race/eth...
The research described in this dissertation explores the impact of cultural definitions of mental he...