Relationships between Psychosocial Resilience and Physical Health Status of Western Australian Urban Aboriginal Youth
Katrina D Hopkins,
Carrington C J Shepherd,
Catherine L Taylor and
Stephen R Zubrick
PLOS ONE, 2015, vol. 10, issue 12, 1-16
Abstract:
Background: Psychosocial processes are implicated as mediators of racial/ethnic health disparities via dysregulation of physiological responses to stress. Our aim was to investigate the extent to which factors previously documented as buffering the impact of high-risk family environments on Aboriginal youths’ psychosocial functioning were similarly beneficial for their physical health status. Method and Results: We examined the relationship between psychosocial resilience and physical health of urban Aboriginal youth (12–17 years, n = 677) drawn from a representative survey of Western Australian Aboriginal children and their families. A composite variable of psychosocial resilient status, derived by cross-classifying youth by high/low family risk exposure and normal/abnormal psychosocial functioning, resulted in four groups- Resilient, Less Resilient, Expected Good and Vulnerable. Separate logistic regression modeling for high and low risk exposed youth revealed that Resilient youth were significantly more likely to have lower self-reported asthma symptoms (OR 3.48, p
Date: 2015
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0145382
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145382
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