Disentangling the directionality among cultural stressors and psychosocial outcomes in recently immigrated Hispanic families: A random intercept cross‐lagged panel model approach

Author:

Ertanir Beyhan12ORCID,Meca Alan3ORCID,Cobb Cory4,Zeledon Ingrid5,Unger Jennifer B.5,Lorenzo‐Blanco Elma6ORCID,Montero‐Zamora Pablo6,Zamboanga Byron L.7ORCID,Baezconde‐Garbanati Lourdes5,Soto Daniel W.5,Aksoy Dilan2,Kassis Wassilis2,Duque Maria8,Alpysbekova Aigerim6,Schwartz Seth J.6

Affiliation:

1. University of Basel Muttenz Switzerland

2. University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland Windisch Switzerland

3. The University of Texas at San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

4. Texas A&M University, College Station College Station Texas USA

5. University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

6. The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

7. University of Arkansas Fayetteville Arkansas USA

8. Boston College Chestnut Hill Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractResearch shows the impact of cultural stressors (e.g. perceived discrimination, bicultural stressors, negative context of reception) on adolescents' psychosocial outcomes. Given the presence of multiple cultural stressors in many Hispanic adolescents' lives, it is essential to examine the (a) developmental sequencing of cultural stressors among recent immigrant youth and (b) predictive effects of cultural stressors on adolescents' psychosocial outcomes. We employed a random intercept cross‐lagged panel model to examine the longitudinal interplay among cultural stressors and their effects on youth outcomes using longitudinal data with six waves among 302 recently immigrated Hispanic adolescents (47% girls, Mage = 14.51, SD = .88). We observed bidirectional within‐person relations and between‐person associations among cultural stressors. At the within‐person level, bidirectional cross‐lagged effects emerged between perceived discrimination and bicultural stress, between perceived discrimination and negative context of reception, and between negative context of reception and bicultural stress. At the between‐person level, bidirectional cross‐lagged effects emerged only between perceived discrimination and bicultural stressors. Our findings indicate that cultural stressors explain heterogeneity in psychosocial outcomes: self‐esteem was inversely predicted by all cultural stressors, whereas depressive symptoms were predicted only by perceived discrimination. In addition, optimism was predicted only by bicultural stressors, and externalizing behavior was predicted by both bicultural stressors and perceived discrimination. These results suggest that the longitudinal relationships among cultural stressors are (partly) bidirectional. Additionally, cultural stressors demonstrated differential predictive effects on psychosocial outcomes, indicating the added value of considering multiple cultural stressors and their longitudinal effects on adolescents' psychosocial outcomes.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Publisher

Wiley

Reference49 articles.

1. Racial/ethnic discrimination and well-being during adolescence: A meta-analytic review.

2. Immigration, Deportation, and Discrimination: Hispanic Political Opinion Since the Election of Donald Trump

3. Camarota S. &Ziegler K.(2022).Foreign‐born population hit record 47 million in April 2022. Center for Immigration Studies.https://cis.org/Report/ForeignBorn‐Population‐Hit‐Record‐47‐Million‐April‐2022

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