“…Results highlight the need of interventions directed to black and Hispanic adolescents with depression that are simultaneously treating anxiety and behavioral problems. Hussen et al ( 8 ) | To analyze social capital, depressive symptoms, and viral suppression of HIV among black, gay, bisexual, and other kinds of adolescents that have sexual intercourse with men living with HIV | Cross-sectional | Socioeconomic factors are a risk for the development of mental comorbidities |
Kilpatrick and Taylor ( 9 ) | To assess the importance of perceived prejudice in a multiethnic sample of study participants with and without physical disability | Cross-sectional | Results show race as a source of prejudice and health risk |
Mowbray et al ( 10 ) | To analyze race as a depression determinant | Cross-sectional | Race is a risk factor for depression |
Assari et al ( 11 ) | To investigate the association between family income and risk of major depressive disorder (MDD) in black young individuals, based on ethnicity, gender | Cross-sectional | Results suggest that ethnicity and gender influence how socioeconomic resources, like income, are associated with risk of MDD |
Bromberger et al ( 12 ) | To analyze childhood socioeconomic circumstances and depressive load of symptoms throughout 15 years of follow-up in midlife | Cohort | Socioeconomic factors can be mental health determiners |
Youssef et al ( 13 ) | To examine: 1) if there is a dose-response relation between trauma and depressive symptoms; 2) if the initial trauma affected European Americans (AE) and African Americans (AA) in a similar way; and 3) if resilience reduces the trauma effect | Cross-sectional | Even though the adverse experiences have been significantly associated with the depression severity of the dose-response form, a higher resilience mitigated the impact of childhood adversities in depressive symptoms in young adults |
|
…”