Looking forward to student-athlete mental health: Racial/ethnic trends from 2010 to 2015

This study examined trends in functionally impairing depression, significant anxiety, suicidal ideation, and suicide attempts among college student-athletes across time, racial/ethnic group, and student-athlete standing. The sample consisted of 39,840 White, Black, Hispanic/Latinx, Asian/Pacific Isl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of American college health 2021-11, Vol.69 (8), p.942-950
1. Verfasser: Tran, Alisia G. T. T.
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description This study examined trends in functionally impairing depression, significant anxiety, suicidal ideation, and suicide attempts among college student-athletes across time, racial/ethnic group, and student-athlete standing. The sample consisted of 39,840 White, Black, Hispanic/Latinx, Asian/Pacific Islander, Native American, and Multiracial students who reported participating in "varsity" level college athletics in the past 12 months during the Spring 2010-2015 administrations of the American College of Health Association National College Health Assessment II. Chi-square and difference in proportion tests compared mental health rates across time, racial/ethnic groups, and student-athlete status (student-athlete versus non-athlete). Findings suggested a lack of differences in mental health rates between 2010 and 2015, with the exception of a higher rate of anxiety for White student-athletes in 2015. Racial/ethnic comparisons pointed to relatively consistent heightened risks for depression and suicide concerns among Asian/Pacific Islander and Multiracial student-athletes compared to White student-athletes. Student-athlete status appeared most consistently to benefit White student-athletes, whereas there was evidence of potential liability of student-athlete status for Asian/Pacific Islander student-athletes. Results make the case for adopting a racially/ethnically aware cultural lens when conceptualizing mental health risk and resilience among student-athletes.
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Racial/ethnic comparisons pointed to relatively consistent heightened risks for depression and suicide concerns among Asian/Pacific Islander and Multiracial student-athletes compared to White student-athletes. Student-athlete status appeared most consistently to benefit White student-athletes, whereas there was evidence of potential liability of student-athlete status for Asian/Pacific Islander student-athletes. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects American Indians
Anxiety
At Risk Students
Athletes
Chi-square test
College Athletics
College Students
Cultural Relevance
depression
Depression (Psychology)
disparities
Ethnic groups
Ethnicity
Humans
Mental depression
Mental Health
Multiracial Persons
Pacific Islander people
Pacific Islanders
Psychological Patterns
race
Racial Differences
Resilience
Sports
Student athletes
student-athlete
Students
Suicidal ideation
Suicide
Suicides & suicide attempts
Trends
United States
Universities
White Students
Whites
title Looking forward to student-athlete mental health: Racial/ethnic trends from 2010 to 2015
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