Microaggressions and Diurnal Cortisol: Examining Within-Person Associations Among African-American and Latino Young Adults

We examined the relations between African-American and Latino young adults’ microaggressions and subsequent changes in weekly diurnal cortisol parameters (i.e., cortisol awakening responses, overall cortisol output (AUC), and diurnal slopes). Young adults (N = 53, Mage = 20years, SD = .90; 72% femal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of adolescent health 2018-10, Vol.63 (4), p.482-488
Hauptverfasser: Zeiders, Katharine H., Landor, Antoinette M., Flores, Melissa, Brown, Alaysia
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container_end_page 488
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container_start_page 482
container_title Journal of adolescent health
container_volume 63
creator Zeiders, Katharine H.
Landor, Antoinette M.
Flores, Melissa
Brown, Alaysia
description We examined the relations between African-American and Latino young adults’ microaggressions and subsequent changes in weekly diurnal cortisol parameters (i.e., cortisol awakening responses, overall cortisol output (AUC), and diurnal slopes). Young adults (N = 53, Mage = 20years, SD = .90; 72% female) participated in a 4-week diary study in which they reported their weekly experiences of microaggressions and completed 2 days ofsaliva samples each week. Saliva samples were obtained at waking, 30-minutes after waking, and bedtime on each sampling day (six samples each week; 24 samples total). In line with an idiographic approach to stress, young adults’ increases and decreases in microaggressions (relative to their own average) were linked to changes in cortisol parameters the following week. Increases in microaggressions predicted greater AUC the subsequent week, controlling for gender, race, parental education, prior week's AUC, and weekly behavioral controls. Follow-up analyses of specific types of microaggressions indicated that experiences centered around criminality and second-class citizenship also related to increases in young adults’ cortisol awakening responses the subsequent week. Microaggressions were unrelated to changes in diurnal slopes. Microaggressions were linked to subsequent changes in diurnal cortisol among African-American and Latino young adults. Given the rigorous within-person design, findings point to the importance and impact of subtle forms of discrimination on young adults’ hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, which is theorized to underlie health and well-being.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.04.018
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Young adults (N = 53, Mage = 20years, SD = .90; 72% female) participated in a 4-week diary study in which they reported their weekly experiences of microaggressions and completed 2 days ofsaliva samples each week. Saliva samples were obtained at waking, 30-minutes after waking, and bedtime on each sampling day (six samples each week; 24 samples total). In line with an idiographic approach to stress, young adults’ increases and decreases in microaggressions (relative to their own average) were linked to changes in cortisol parameters the following week. Increases in microaggressions predicted greater AUC the subsequent week, controlling for gender, race, parental education, prior week's AUC, and weekly behavioral controls. Follow-up analyses of specific types of microaggressions indicated that experiences centered around criminality and second-class citizenship also related to increases in young adults’ cortisol awakening responses the subsequent week. Microaggressions were unrelated to changes in diurnal slopes. Microaggressions were linked to subsequent changes in diurnal cortisol among African-American and Latino young adults. 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Young adults (N = 53, Mage = 20years, SD = .90; 72% female) participated in a 4-week diary study in which they reported their weekly experiences of microaggressions and completed 2 days ofsaliva samples each week. Saliva samples were obtained at waking, 30-minutes after waking, and bedtime on each sampling day (six samples each week; 24 samples total). In line with an idiographic approach to stress, young adults’ increases and decreases in microaggressions (relative to their own average) were linked to changes in cortisol parameters the following week. Increases in microaggressions predicted greater AUC the subsequent week, controlling for gender, race, parental education, prior week's AUC, and weekly behavioral controls. Follow-up analyses of specific types of microaggressions indicated that experiences centered around criminality and second-class citizenship also related to increases in young adults’ cortisol awakening responses the subsequent week. Microaggressions were unrelated to changes in diurnal slopes. Microaggressions were linked to subsequent changes in diurnal cortisol among African-American and Latino young adults. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects African Americans
Aggressiveness
Awakening
Citizenship
Cortisol
Criminality
Discrimination
Diurnal cortisol
Ethnic-racial discrimination
Hispanic Americans
HPA axis
Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
Microaggressions
Race
Saliva
Sampling
Well being
Young adults
title Microaggressions and Diurnal Cortisol: Examining Within-Person Associations Among African-American and Latino Young Adults
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