J
Health Soc Behav 1999 Sep;40(3):208-30
The prevalence, distribution, and mental health correlates of perceived
discrimination in the United States.
Kessler RC, Mickelson KD, Williams DR.
Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
02115, USA.
Kessler@hcp.med.harvard.edu
The survey data presented here are on the national prevalences of major
life-time perceived discrimination and day-to-day perceived discrimination;
the associations between perceived discrimination and mental health; and
the extent to which differential exposure and differential emotional reactivity
to perceived discrimination account for the well-known associations between
disadvantaged social status and mental health. Although more prevalent
among people with disadvantaged social status, results show that perceived
discrimination is common in the total population, with 33.5 percent of
respondents in the total sample reporting exposure to major lifetime discrimination
and 60.9 percent reporting exposure to day-to-day discrimination. The
associations of perceived discrimination with mental health are comparable
in magnitude to those of other more commonly studied stressors, and these
associations do not vary consistently across subsamples defined on the
basis of social status. Even though perceived discrimination explains
only a small part of the observed associations between disadvantaged social
status and mental health, given its high prevalence, wide distribution,
and strong associations with mental health, perceived discrimination needs
to be treated much more seriously than in the past in future studies of
stress and mental health.
PMID: 10513145 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]