Journal article
Racial/ethnic differences in 12-month prevalence and persistence of mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders: Variation by nativity and socioeconomic status
Comprehensive psychiatry, v 89, pp 52-60
01 Feb 2019
PMID: 30594752
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
Despite equivalent or lower lifetime and past-year prevalence of mental disorder among racial/ethnic minorities compared to non-Latino Whites in the United States, evidence suggests that mental disorders are more persistent among minorities than non-Latino Whites. But, it is unclear how nativity and socioeconomic status contribute to observed racial/ethnic differences in prevalence and persistence of mood, anxiety, and substance disorders.
Data were examined from a coordinated series of four national surveys that together assessed 21,024 Asian, non-Latino Black, Latino, and non-Latino White adults between 2001 and 2003. Common DSM-IV mood, anxiety, and substance disorders were assessed using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Logistic regression analyses examined how several predictors (e.g., race/ethnicity, nativity, education, income) and the interactions between those predictors were associated with both 12-month disorder prevalence and 12-month prevalence among lifetime cases. For the second series of analyses, age of onset and time since onset were used as additional control variables to indirectly estimate disorder persistence.
Non-Latino Whites demonstrated the highest unadjusted 12-month prevalence of all disorder types (p < 0.001), though differences were also observed across minority groups. In contrast, Asian, Latino, and Black adults demonstrated higher 12-month prevalence of mood disorders among lifetime cases than Whites (p < 0.001) prior to adjustments Once we introduced nativity and other relevant controls (e.g., age, sex, urbanicity), US-born Whites with at least one US-born parent demonstrated higher 12-month mood disorder prevalence than foreign-born Whites or US-born Whites with two foreign parents (OR = 0.51, 95% CI = [0.36, 0.73]); this group also demonstrated higher odds of past-year mood disorder than Asian (OR = 0.59, 95% CI = [0.42, 0.82]) and Black (OR = 0.70, 95% CI = [0.58, 0.83]) adults, but not Latino adults (OR = 0.89, 95% CI = [0.74, 1.06]). Racial/ethnic differences in 12-month mood and substance disorder prevalence were moderated by educational attainment, especially among adults without a college education. Additionally, racial/ethnic minority groups with no more than a high school education demonstrated more persistent mood and substance disorders than non-Latino Whites; these relationships reversed or disappeared at higher education levels.
Nativity may be a particularly relevant consideration for diagnosing mood disorder among non-Latino Whites; additionally, lower education appears to be associated with increased relative risk of persistent mood and substance use disorders among racial/ethnic minorities compared to non-Latino Whites.
•Non-Latino Whites most likely to have 12-month disorders, even with SES controls.•Link between race/ethnicity and mood disorder varied by nativity among Whites.•Race/ethnicity interacted with education, but not income, to predict prevalence.•Racial/ethnic minority groups had more persistent mood disorders than Whites.•Observed links to persistent mood and substance disorders varied by education level.
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Details
- Title
- Racial/ethnic differences in 12-month prevalence and persistence of mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders: Variation by nativity and socioeconomic status
- Creators
- Corrie L. Vilsaint - Massachusetts General HospitalAmanda NeMoyer - Massachusetts General HospitalMirko Fillbrunn - Massachusetts General HospitalEkaterina Sadikova - Harvard UniversityRonald C. Kessler - Harvard UniversityNancy A. Sampson - Harvard UniversityKiara Alvarez - Massachusetts General HospitalJennifer Greif Green - Wheelock CollegeKatie A. McLaughlin - Harvard UniversityRuijia Chen - Harvard UniversityDavid R. Williams - Harvard UniversityJames S. Jackson - Ann Arbor Center for Independent LivingMargarita Alegría - Massachusetts General Hospital
- Publication Details
- Comprehensive psychiatry, v 89, pp 52-60
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Psychological and Brain Sciences (Psychology)
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000466263500009
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-85059169788
- Other Identifier
- 991020929747704721
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Psychiatry