“…Regarding the former, a study of Black parents and their children (part of the Family and Community Health Study [FACHS]) found that self-reports of discrimination were related to increases in anxiety and depression for both the parents and their children (Gibbons, Gerrard, Wills, Cleveland & Brody, 2004; see also Brown et al, 2000; Klonoff, Landrine, & Ulman, 1999). This relation has also been found in a recent experimental study showing that young Black adults who were excluded by Whites in an online game of Cyberball attributed that exclusion to racial discrimination and reported increases in depression (Stock et al, 2017). Importantly, internalizing affective responses have consistently been associated with decreases in health status, including chronic illnesses, physical limitations, poor immune functioning (Dickerson & Kemeny, 2004; Robles, Glaser, & Kiecolt-Glaser, 2005), as well as risk for STIs (Roberts et al, 2012).…”