August 2022         
Today's Date: July 2, 2024
Black-Owned Pharmacy Startup in St. Louis Combines Services of Walgreens and Amazon to Address Pharmacy Desert Crisis   •   Susan G. Komen® Warns of Dire Impact from Braidwood Management, Inc. et al. v. Xavier Becerra et al. Ruling That Will Force   •   Shop, Sip, and Support Social Justice Programs at Five Keys Furniture Annex in Stockton, California, on Saturday, June 22nd from   •   Chinatown Storytelling Centre Opens New Exhibit: Neighbours: From Pender to Hastings   •   Travel Industry Professional Women Gather for Third Annual Women in Travel THRIVE at HSMAI Day of Impact 2024   •   Media Advisory: Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Sandra Thompson Visits Affordable Apartment Complex in Dallas   •   Lifezone Metals Announces Voting Results from its 2024 Annual General Meeting   •   PARAMOUNT GLOBAL, NICKELODEON AND DCMP FORM MULTI-YEAR PARTNERSHIP TO MAKE BRANDS' GLOBALLY BELOVED KIDS' PROGRAMMING ACCESSIBLE   •   Melmark Receives $30M Gift to Fuel Services for Individuals with Autism, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities   •   REI Systems Awarded $6M Contract from U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for its Grants Management Solution   •   Maximus Named a Top Washington-Area Workplace by The Washington Post   •   SCOTUS Ruling in Rahimi Case Upholds Protections for Domestic Violence Survivors, BWJP Experts Celebrate   •   World's Largest Swimming Lesson™ (#WLSL2024) Kicks Off First Day of Summer with Global Event Teaching Kids and Parents How   •   Martina Navratilova, Riley Gaines, Donna de Varona, Jennifer Sey Join Female Athletes For Rally in Washington, DC to "Take Back   •   Media Advisory: Arvest Bank Awards $15,000 CARE Award to University District Development Corp.   •   Produced by Renegade Film Productions/Chameleon Multimedia, Obscure Urban Legend ‘Sweaty Larry’ to Be Invoked for Fi   •   Survey of Nation's Mayors Highlights City Efforts to Support LGBTQ+ Residents   •   The V Foundation for Cancer Research Announces 2024 Recipients for A Grant of Her Own: The Women Scientists Innovation Award for   •   Carín León's Socios Music Forms Global Partnership with Virgin Music Group and Island Records   •   Freedmen’s Town Community Investment Initiative Launches
Bookmark and Share

BLACK MALE DEPRESSION SURPRISES

WASHINGTON — Jobless African-American men might be at a greater risk of suffering from depression, new research shows. More surprising, at the other end of the income spectrum, African-American men making $80,000 and upward are also among those at higher risk.


For women, the picture is different: those in the $45,000 to $79,999 income bracket are less likely to report symptoms of depression compared to women with the least income, according to the results of a national survey of mental disorders among African-Americans.

Darrell Hudson, Ph.D., and colleagues analyzed data from the National Survey of American Life to determine how factors related to social class like income, education, wealth, employment status, mother’s education and marital status relate to depression.

“After measuring depression in a very comprehensive way, the results were not very consistent. We need to figure out as a general public: Is there a cost associated with socioeconomic position or moving in an upward trajectory?” said Hudson, at the Center on Social Disparities in Health at the University of San Francisco.

In all, researchers assessed the nationally representative sample of 3,570 African American men and women for depressive episodes that occurred within the past year and over their lifetimes. The study appears online in the journalSocial Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology.

African-American men who made $80,000 were more apt to report symptoms of depression in the last year compared to African-American men making $17,000 or less. Unemployed African-American men were more liable to report depression in the last year and over their lifetime compared to employed African-American men. African-

American men who completed some college or beyond were less likely to suffer from depression in the last year compared to those who did not complete high school.
“One thing could be going on with African-American men with greater incomes: the more likely they are to work in integrated settings, the more likely to be exposed to racial discrimination,” Hudson said. “Racial discrimination can undermine some of the positive effects of socioeconomic position like the increased benefits of health and feeling better.”

“African-Americans with greater socioeconomic resources are farther away from their social support network, both physically and socially,” Hudson said.
African-American men with high incomes tend to be “riding solo,” said Earlise Ward, Ph.D.

“They might have to worry about tokenism, the lack of African-American role models, social isolation from peers who make less money, and pressure from family and friends to provide for them.”

“When all these things come together, you have the perfect storm for depression with African- American men making over $80,000,” said Ward, a psychologist and assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Nursing. She had no affiliation with the new study.

Single African-American men were more apt to be depressed than married African-American men both in the short and long term.
“It is clear. Marriage is protective for men suffering from depression,” Ward said.

Not so for women, however.

“Women have a number of roles not only within the home, but outside the home. They have work-related stressors that they experience. Then they come home and are wives and mothers. The might also have additional caregiving responsibilities, such as caring for aging parents or their extended family,” Ward said.
For women, education, wealth and parental education were not associated with depression.

Ward said she could apply this research in the clinical setting: “In therapy with an African-American male in a high income category and either single or divorced, after knowing this research, I may spend time focusing on intimate relationships because this research shows that this may be protective.”

Contrarily, if Ward is working with a woman client, she might ask about her workweek and responsibilities at home as a wife and mother.

Today, the need is stronger than ever for both prevention and intervention programs to reduce risk and treat depression, Ward said.

“African-American men are particularly vulnerable to unemployment, particularly those who suffer from depression. These data were collected from 2001 to 2003. If we used data collected in 2007 to 2009, it could be worse for African-American men,” Hudson said.

 

Editor’s note: Dr. Hudson is part of the Kellogg Health Scholars Program, which is affiliated with the Center for Advancing Health.
CFAH conducts research, communicates findings and advocates for policies that support everyone’s ability to benefit from advances in health science.
By Sarah Jorgenson, CFAH Communications/Research Associate, Health Behavior News Service 


STORY TAGS: Black News, African American News, Minority News, Civil Rights News, Discrimination, Racism, Racial Equality, Bias, Equality, Afro American News

Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News