| Literature DB >> 30364828 |
Derrick D Matthews1, Wizdom Powell Hammond1, Yasmin Cole-Lewis2, Amani Nuru-Jeter3, Travis Melvin1.
Abstract
Despite well-documented associations between everyday racial discrimination and depression, mechanisms underlying this association among African-American men are poorly understood. Guided by the Transactional Model of Stress and Coping, we frame masculine self-reliance and John Henryism as appraisal mechanisms that influence the relationship between racial discrimination, a source of significant psychosocial stress, and depressive symptoms among African-American men. We also investigate whether the proposed relationships vary by reported discrimination-specific coping responses. Participants were 478 African-American men recruited primarily from barbershops in the West and South regions of the United States. Multiple linear regression and Sobel-Goodman mediation analyses were used to examine direct and mediated associations between our study variables. Racial discrimination and masculine self-reliance were positively associated with depressive symptoms, though the latter only among active responders. John Henryism was negatively associated with depressive symptoms, mediated the masculine self-reliance-depressive symptom relationship, and among active responders moderated the racial discrimination-depressive symptoms relationship. Though structural interventions are essential, clinical interventions designed to mitigate the mental health consequences of racial discrimination among African-American men should leverage masculine self-reliance and active coping mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: John Henryism; depression; masculinity; racial discrimination; stress and coping
Year: 2012 PMID: 30364828 PMCID: PMC6197817 DOI: 10.1037/a0028436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Men Masc ISSN: 1524-9220