Johal Priya K, Singal Sonali, Daruvala Tamina, Saraiya Tanya C
Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research.
Rutgers University-New Brunswick, The State University of New Jersey.
J Aggress Maltreat Trauma. 2025 Jul 8. doi: 10.1080/10926771.2025.2528130.
Asian Americans experience high rates of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) but are significantly underrepresented in ACEs research. Despite evidence indicating that ACEs contribute to increased psychological distress and substance use among minoritized emerging adults and that a strong sense of ethnic identity can mitigate these impacts, no study has exclusively examined these relationships among Asian Americans. This study investigated how (1) ACEs relate to symptoms of posttraumatic stress, depression, anxiety, and binge drinking; and explored (2) the strength of ethnic identity as a moderator in this sample. Second-generation and one-and-a-half generation Asian Americans (=199, aged 18-29, 53% East Asian, 30% South Asian, 17% Southeast Asian) were recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk and a northeastern university in the U.S. to complete an online survey. Multivariate linear and binary logistic regressions revealed that ACEs significantly predicted higher symptoms of posttraumatic stress (B=3.00, <.001), depression (B= 2.36, < .001), and anxiety (B=1.33, =.002), and an increased odds of binge drinking (OR=1.30, 95% CI [1.07, 1.58]). The strength of ethnic identity did not significantly moderate outcomes; however, stronger ethnic identity was independently significantly associated with lower anxiety symptoms (B= -2.89, =.01). Among Asian American emerging adults, ACEs are associated with psychological distress and binge drinking. However, unlike in other minoritized groups, ethnic identity did not protect against these outcomes, suggesting the need to identify alternative culturally-relevant protective factors in Asian Americans.
亚裔美国人童年不良经历(ACEs)的发生率很高,但在ACEs研究中的代表性却明显不足。尽管有证据表明,ACEs会导致少数族裔新兴成年人的心理困扰增加和物质使用问题,而且强烈的族裔认同感可以减轻这些影响,但尚无研究专门考察亚裔美国人中的这些关系。本研究调查了(1)ACEs与创伤后应激、抑郁、焦虑和暴饮症状之间的关系;并探讨了(2)在该样本中作为调节因素的族裔认同感的强度。从亚马逊土耳其机器人平台和美国一所东北部大学招募了第二代以及1.5代亚裔美国人(=199人,年龄在18 - 29岁之间,53%为东亚人,30%为南亚人,17%为东南亚人),以完成一项在线调查。多元线性回归和二元逻辑回归显示,ACEs显著预测了更高的创伤后应激症状(B = 3.00,p <.001)、抑郁症状(B = 2.36,p <.001)和焦虑症状(B = 1.33,p =.002),以及暴饮几率的增加(OR = 1.30,95%置信区间[1.07, 1.58])。族裔认同感的强度并未显著调节结果;然而,更强的族裔认同感与更低的焦虑症状独立显著相关(B = -2.89,p =.01)。在亚裔美国新兴成年人中,ACEs与心理困扰和暴饮有关。然而,与其他少数族裔群体不同的是,族裔认同感并不能预防这些结果,这表明需要在亚裔美国人中识别其他与文化相关的保护因素。