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Racial discrimination and substance use: longitudinal associations and identity moderators
Authors:Thomas E Fuller-Rowell  Courtney D Cogburn  Amanda B Brodish  Stephen C Peck  Oksana Malanchuk  Jacquelynne S Eccles
Institution:1. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health and Society Scholar, University of Wisconsin, 610 Walnut Street, WARF 707, Madison, WI, 53726-2397, USA
2. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract:Current research indicates that racial discrimination is pervasive in the lives of African Americans. Although there are a variety of ways in which discrimination may contribute to health, one potentially important pathway is through its impact on substance use. Addressing the paucity of longitudinal research on this topic, the present study examined the influence of teacher discrimination on changes in substance use over time among African American adolescents and considered three dimensions of racial identity as moderators of this association (centrality, private regard, and public regard). Latent variable SEM analyses indicated that, on average, levels of discrimination were associated with increases in substance use across the high school years. However, public regard was found to moderate this association such that discrimination was less strongly associated with increases in substance use for individual who reported lower levels of public regard. The implications of these findings are discussed.
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