Daily Hassles, Self-Esteem, and Depressive Symptoms in African American Women Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
- PMID: 40114779
- PMCID: PMC11922542
- DOI: 10.1080/10926771.2024.2428160
Daily Hassles, Self-Esteem, and Depressive Symptoms in African American Women Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
Abstract
The present cross-sectional study was aimed at investigating the mediating role of self-esteem on the relation between daily hassles and depressive symptoms among traumatized women. The sample, which was drawn from a large public, inner city healthcare system, consisted of 154 low-income African American women with a mean age of 36.66 (SD = 11.43) with a recent history of both one or more suicide attempt(s) and exposure to interpersonal violence in the form of intimate partner violence (IPV). A series of scales were administered to the women including the Survey of Recent Life Events (SRLE), Beck Self-Esteem Scales (BSES), and Beck Depression Inventory - II (BDI-II). Mplus v8.8 was used to estimate the total, direct, and indirect effects simultaneously for other type of self-esteem (views of self [self-esteem: self], perceptions of others' views of them [self-esteem: other]). As predicted, daily hassles were associated positively and significantly with depressive symptoms and negatively and significantly with both forms of self-esteem. In addition, lower levels of self-esteem: self, but not self-esteem: other, was associated positively and significantly with depressive symptoms. Partial support was obtained for the mediational hypothesis; self-esteem according to one's self-evaluation (self-esteem: self), but not projected evaluations of others (self-esteem: other), mediated the daily hassles-depressive symptoms link. Thus, depressive symptoms in African American female suicide attempters exposed to IPV appear to vary based on how these women appraise their own self-worth in the context of managing daily stressors and hassles.
Keywords: daily hassles; depression; intimate partner violence; self-esteem.
Conflict of interest statement
None of the authors have any conflicts of interest to report.
References
-
- Asselman E, Wittchen H-U, Lieb R, & Beesdo-Baum K (2017). A 10-year prospective-longitudinal study of daily hassles and incident psychopathology among adolescents and young adults: interactions with gender, perceived coping efficacy, and negative life events. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 52, 1353–1362. 10.1007/s00127-017-1436-3 - DOI - PubMed
-
- Beck AT, Steer RA, & Brown GK (1996). Beck Depression Inventory manual (2nd edition). Psychological Corporation.
-
- Benca-Bachman CE, Najera DD, Whitfield KE, Taylor JL, Thorpe RJ Jr, & Palmer RHC (2020). Quality and quantity of social support show differential associations with stress and depression in African Americans. American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 28(6), 597–605. 10.1016/j.jagp.2020.02.004 - DOI - PMC - PubMed
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Research Materials