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Original Articles

Acculturative stress and experiential avoidance: relations to depression, suicide, and anxiety symptoms among minority college students

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Pages 501-517 | Received 23 Mar 2016, Accepted 21 Jun 2016, Published online: 22 Jul 2016
 

Abstract

Although college campuses represent strategic locations to address mental health disparity among minorities in the US, there has been strikingly little empirical work on risk processes for anxiety/depression among this population. The present investigation examined the interactive effects of acculturative stress and experiential avoidance in relation to anxiety and depressive symptoms among minority college students (n = 1,095; 78.1% female; Mage = 21.92, SD = 4.23; 15.1% African-American (non-Hispanic), 45.3% Hispanic, 32.5% Asian, and 7.1% other races/ethnicities. Results provided empirical evidence of an interaction between acculturative stress and experiential avoidance for suicidal, social anxiety, and anxious arousal symptoms among the studied sample. Inspection of the significant interactions revealed that acculturative stress was related to greater levels of suicidal symptoms, social anxiety, and anxious arousal among minority college students with higher, but not lower, levels of experiential avoidance. However, in contrast to prediction, there was no significant interaction for depressive symptoms. Together, these data provide novel empirical evidence for the clinically-relevant interplay between acculturative stress and experiential avoidance in regard to a relatively wide array of negative emotional states among minority college students.

Acknowledgements

This work has not been presented previously in any form. The study was approved by Institutional Review Board at the University of Houston. Informed written consent was obtained prior to initiating study procedures. No animals have been employed in this research.

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