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Interpersonal Violence and Mental Health Outcomes among Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander College Students.

Authors
  • Archambeau, Olga G1
  • Frueh, B Christopher
  • Deliramich, Aimee N
  • Elhai, Jon D
  • Grubaugh, Anouk L
  • Herman, Steve
  • Kim, Bryan S K
  • 1 Department of Psychology, University of Hawaii, Hilo, HI.
Type
Published Article
Journal
Psychological Trauma Theory Research Practice and Policy
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Publication Date
Dec 01, 2010
Volume
2
Issue
4
Pages
273–283
Identifiers
PMID: 21297936
Source
Medline
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

In a cross-sectional survey of college students (N = 614) we studied interpersonal violence victimization, perpetration, and mental health outcomes in an ethnoracially diverse rural-based sample of Asian Americans (27%), and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islanders (25%), two groups vastly underrepresented in trauma research. High rates of interpersonal violence (34%), violence perpetration (13%), and probable psychiatric diagnoses (77%), including posttraumatic stress disorder, were found. Exposure to physical violence, sexual violence, and life stress all were predictive of psychopathology. Female participants were associated with higher likelihood of sexual violence victimization compared to male participants, and Asian American status (especially among males) was associated with lower likelihood of physical and sexual violence compared with European Americans. These data enhance our understanding of interpersonal violence and mental health outcomes among previously understudied minority groups.

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