Economic insecurity and depression among youth of color during the COVID-19 pandemic
Tasfia Jahangir, Marcia J. Ash, Melvin D. Livingston, Regine Haardörfer, Jannette Berkley-Patton, Briana Woods-Jaeger

TL;DR
The paper explores how economic instability during the pandemic worsened mental health among youth of color, particularly through stress and loneliness.
Contribution
The study applies a specific theoretical framework to examine how financial insecurity during the pandemic links to depression through stress and loneliness in youth of color.
Findings
Financial insecurity was strongly linked to increased stress, loneliness, and depressive symptoms.
Both stress and loneliness partially mediated the relationship between financial insecurity and depression.
The findings highlight structural inequities that affect mental health outcomes in youth of color.
Abstract
Communities of color have disproportionately faced burdens and losses during COVID-19, including greater economic instability and higher death rates. These overlapping stressors heightened the risk of negative mental health among youth of color. We relied on the Unified Macrotheory of Depression among Urban Black youth to examine associations among three indicators of economic insecurity – COVID-related financial insecurity, neighborhood income, and free/reduced-price lunch eligibility— and depressive symptoms, as well as the potential mediating roles of stress and loneliness. We analyzed cross-sectional survey data among 105 adolescents and young adults of color (majority Black) in Kansas City, Missouri. Participants reported on their experiences of financial insecurity, stress, loneliness and depressive symptoms measured variable path analysis. COVID-related financial insecurity was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmployment and Welfare Studies · COVID-19 and Mental Health · Racial and Ethnic Identity Research
