Emotional Distress in a Marginalized Population as a Function of Household-Level Social Determinants of Health

Author:

Lushin Victor1,Rivera Rebecca2,Chandler Marquis3,Rees Jo4,Rzewinski Justyna5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Work, Long Island University Brooklyn MD, are assistant professors, , Brooklyn, NY, USA

2. Department of Social Work, Long Island University Brooklyn PhD, LCSW, are assistant professors, , Brooklyn, NY, USA

3. Department of Social Work, Long Island University Brooklyn PhD, LSW, are assistant professors, , Brooklyn, NY, USA

4. School of Health Professions, Long Island University Brooklyn PhD, is associate dean, , Brooklyn, NY, USA

5. Revcore Recovery Center of Manhattan LCSW, is clinical director, , New York, NY, USA

Abstract

AbstractLow-income, underrepresented communities of color are disproportionally affected by emotional distress. Little is known about malleable, household-level determinants of emotional distress, addressable by feasible, stigma-neutral interventions. The present study addressed this knowledge gap by analyzing secondary data from a cross-sectional community needs assessment survey in a marginalized urban community (N = 677). Relying on dominance analyses, authors found that, on average, the largest household-level contributions to respondents’ emotional distress included exposures to fellow household members’ alcohol use and anger-driven behaviors. Both determinants are arguably feasible to address via household-level interventions and community-level preventive efforts. Household members’ physical and serious mental illness and drug use were moderately associated with respondents’ emotional distress; household cohesion and communications, residential overcrowding, and child behavior played a minimal role. Article concludes with a discussion of public health implications of the results.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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