Volume 70, Issue 2 p. 279-297
Original Article

Perceived Racial Discrimination, Drug Use, and Psychological Distress in African American Youth: A Pathway to Child Health Disparities

Kathy Sanders-Phillips

Corresponding Author

Kathy Sanders-Phillips

Howard University College of Medicine

Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Kathy Sanders-Phillips, Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, College of Medicine, Howard University, 1840 7th Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20001 [e-mail: [email protected]].Search for more papers by this author
Wendy Kliewer

Wendy Kliewer

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Taqi Tirmazi

Taqi Tirmazi

Morgan State University

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Von Nebbitt

Von Nebbitt

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Takisha Carter

Takisha Carter

Howard University College of Medicine

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Heather Key

Heather Key

Howard University College of Medicine

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First published: 11 June 2014
Citations: 41

This project was supported by a grant (1R01DA1498402) from the National institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) to Kathy Sanders-Phillips (PI).

Abstract

Experiences of racial discrimination and social inequality are related to higher levels of psychological distress and substance use that may contribute to health disparities among youth. This within-group quantitative survey study tested two alternative theoretical models of the relations between perceived racial discrimination, psychological distress, alcohol, and marijuana use in a sample of 567 African American high school students (61% female; mean age = 15.6 years). Path analyses indicated most support for a model linking perceived racial discrimination to more depressive symptoms that, in turn, were associated with greater past month alcohol and marijuana use. These findings expand our understanding of the direction of effects for exposure to racial discrimination in African American youth and reinforce the need for public health policies, research, and programs for African American youth that acknowledge and address the psychological effects of exposure to racial discrimination on alcohol and marijuana use.