“…Regression analysis was primarily used, but some employed more sophisticated methods, such as latent class analysis and latent profile analysis to create categories of various exposure variables, including discriminatory experience, cultural stressors, and coping styles [22,28,30,31,44,45]. Techniques were employed by some studies to examine potential intermediary pathways between discrimination and mental health, such as through depressive symptoms or anxiety [19,24,43,46], avoidant coping strategies [33,47], trans diagnostic factors [48], general stress [40], stronger belief in an unjust world [49], acculturation-related and social support variables [13,50,51], anger [46], prosocial behavior [33], and perfectionism [52]. Other studies employed mediation techniques to examine if discrimination was on the pathway between a more upstream exposure, such as childhood adversity [53], historical trauma [28], a perpetual foreigner stereotype [37], white composition of one’s environment [29], critical ethnic awareness [50], and nativity [54], and a mental health outcome.…”