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The Impact of Daily Discrimination on Sleep/Wake Problem Trajectories Among Diverse Adolescents
Child Development ( IF 3.9 ) Pub Date : 2021-06-09 , DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13605
Mingjun Xie 1 , Tiffany Yip 2 , Heining Cham 2 , Mona El-Sheikh 3
Affiliation  

This study examines how everyday discrimination is associated with 6-day trajectories of sleep/wake problems, operationalized as sleep disturbance and daytime dysfunction, among 350 diverse adolescents (Mage = 14.27, SD = 0.61, 69% female; 22% African American, 41% Asian American, 37% Latinx; 24% multiethnic/racial; across participating schools, 72% of students eligible for free/reduced price lunch) in the Northeastern United States. Adolescents encountering discrimination experienced changes in sleep/wake problem trajectories (i.e., significant increases in same-day sleep/wake problems), whereas adolescents reporting no discrimination experienced no changes in trajectories (Cohen’s ds = .51–.55). Multiethnic/racial (compared to monoethnic/racial) adolescents experiencing everyday discrimination reported greater same-day sleep/wake problems, yet steeper decreases in sleep/wake problems suggesting stronger impact coupled with faster return to baseline levels.

中文翻译:

日常歧视对不同青少年睡眠/觉醒问题轨迹的影响

本研究在 350 名不同的青少年(M年龄 = 14.27,SD  = 0.61,69% 女性;22% 非洲裔美国人,在美国东北部,41% 的亚裔美国人,37% 的拉丁裔;24% 的多民族/种族;在所有参与的学校中,72% 的学生有资格获得免费/减价午餐)。遭受歧视的青少年经历了睡眠/觉醒问题轨迹的变化(即,当日睡眠/觉醒问题显着增加),而报告没有歧视的青少年经历轨迹没有变化(Cohen's ds = .51–.55)。经历日常歧视的多民族/种族(与单民族/种族相比)青少年报告了更大的当日睡眠/觉醒问题,但睡眠/觉醒问题的下降幅度更大,这表明影响更大,同时恢复到基线水平的速度更快。
更新日期:2021-06-09
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