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Title

The effects of familial acculturative stress and hopelessness on suicidal ideation by immigration status among college students.

Authors

Lane, Robert; Miranda, Regina

Abstract

Objectives: Based on acculturative family distancing theory, we examined whether familial acculturative stress interacted with hopelessness to predict suicidal ideation differentially among emerging adult immigrant versus nonimmigrant college students.Participants: We recruited 152 generationally and racially/ethnically diverse college students (42 immigrants) from 2012 to 2013.Methods: Participants completed measures of hopelessness, depressive symptoms, ethnic identity, familial acculturative stress, and suicidal ideation.Results: Immigrant status interacted with hopelessness and familial acculturative stress. Hopelessness was associated with less suicidal ideation among immigrants than among nonimmigrants at a familial acculturative stress score below the 11th percentile, but greater suicidal ideation among immigrants than among nonimmigrants at a familial acculturative stress score above the 72nd percentile.Conclusions: Familial acculturative stress may exacerbate the effect of hopelessness on suicidal ideation among immigrant college students, and should be monitored during suicide risk assessment and treatment.

Subjects

ACCULTURATION; PSYCHOLOGY of college students; MENTAL depression; DESPAIR; EMIGRATION & immigration; ETHNIC groups; RACE; RISK assessment; PSYCHOLOGICAL stress; SUICIDE; FAMILY relations; SUICIDAL ideation

Publication

Journal of American College Health, 2018, Vol 66, Issue 2, p76

ISSN

0744-8481

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1080/07448481.2017.1376673

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