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. 2003 Sep;44(3):353-69.

Race differences in depressive symptoms: a dynamic perspective on stress exposure and vulnerability

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  • PMID: 14582313

Race differences in depressive symptoms: a dynamic perspective on stress exposure and vulnerability

Linda K George et al. J Health Soc Behav. 2003 Sep.

Abstract

The existence, nature, and strength of race differences in mental health remain unclear after several decades of research. In this research, we examine black-white differences in the relationship between acute stressors and depressive symptoms. We reframe the stress exposure and differential vulnerability hypotheses in the context of long-term trajectories of stress and depression, and we hypothesize that trajectories of stress growth will be associated with trajectories of depressive symptom growth. Using latent growth curve analysis of a sample of 1,972 older persons interviewed three times at three-year intervals, we test the hypotheses that (1) growth in exposure to loss-related events will predict growth in depressive symptoms, and (2) African Americans will experience greater stress growth than whites. Results support the hypotheses. Stress growth exhibited a linear increase for blacks but not for whites, and predicted depression growth for both races, but explained more variance for blacks than for whites.

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