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Journal Article

Citation

Stevens C, Liu CH, Chen JA. J. Am. Coll. Health 2018; 66(7): 665-673.

Affiliation

Massachusetts General Hospital , Harvard Medical School.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/07448481.2018.1452745

PMID

29565755

Abstract

OBJECTIVE AND PARTICIPANTS: Using data from 69,722 US undergraduates participating in the spring 2015 National College Health Assessment, we examine racial/ethnic differences in students' experience of discrimination.

METHOD: Logistic regression predicted the experience of discrimination and its reported negative effect on academics. Additional models examined the effect of attending a Minority Serving Institution (MSI).

RESULTS: Discrimination was experienced by 5-15% of students, with all racial/ethnic minority groups examined- including Black, Hispanic, Asian, AI/NA/NA, and Multiracial students- more likely to report discrimination relative to White students. Of students who experienced discrimination, 15-25% reported it had negatively impacted their academic performance, with Hispanic and Asian students more likely to report negative impacts relative to White students. Attending an MSI was associated with decreased experiences of discrimination.

CONCLUSION: Students from racial/ethnic minority backgrounds are disproportionately affected by discrimination, with negative impacts for academic performance that are particularly marked for Hispanic and Asian students.


Language: en

Keywords

counseling; discrimination; ethnicity; mental health; race

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