Relationships between Psychosocial Resilience and Physical Health Status of Western Australian Urban Aboriginal Youth

Psychosocial processes are implicated as mediators of racial/ethnic health disparities via dysregulation of physiological responses to stress. Our aim was to investigate the extent to which factors previously documented as buffering the impact of high-risk family environments on Aboriginal youths�...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-12, Vol.10 (12), p.e0145382-e0145382
Hauptverfasser: Hopkins, Katrina D, Shepherd, Carrington C J, Taylor, Catherine L, Zubrick, Stephen R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Psychosocial processes are implicated as mediators of racial/ethnic health disparities via dysregulation of physiological responses to stress. Our aim was to investigate the extent to which factors previously documented as buffering the impact of high-risk family environments on Aboriginal youths' psychosocial functioning were similarly beneficial for their physical health status. We examined the relationship between psychosocial resilience and physical health of urban Aboriginal youth (12-17 years, n = 677) drawn from a representative survey of Western Australian Aboriginal children and their families. A composite variable of psychosocial resilient status, derived by cross-classifying youth by high/low family risk exposure and normal/abnormal psychosocial functioning, resulted in four groups- Resilient, Less Resilient, Expected Good and Vulnerable. Separate logistic regression modeling for high and low risk exposed youth revealed that Resilient youth were significantly more likely to have lower self-reported asthma symptoms (OR 3.48, p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0145382