Disability-Based Microaggressions, Social Support, and Psychological Distress in Aging Adults with Disabilities
Dylan Serpas, Daniel Ignacio, Barbara Cherry

TL;DR
This study examines how disability-based microaggressions affect psychological distress in aging adults and whether social support can reduce this impact.
Contribution
The study investigates the moderating role of social support in the relationship between disability-based microaggressions and psychological distress in aging adults with disabilities.
Findings
Disability-based microaggressions are positively associated with anxiety symptoms.
Social support did not significantly moderate the relationship between microaggressions and distress.
Results emphasize the need for interventions to reduce microaggressions and foster inclusivity.
Abstract
Disability-based microaggressions — subtle, often unintentional discriminatory remarks or behaviors — are related to increased psychological distress among aging adults. These experiences may reinforce negative stereotypes, undermine autonomy, and contribute to feelings of exclusion. Social support is an empirically-supported moderator of the effects of discrimination, yet research examining social support and lifetime frequency of disability-based microaggressions among aging adults with disabilities (AWD) is limited. This study explored whether social support moderates the relationship between lifetime experiences of disability-based microaggressions and psychological distress. A national sample of 243 aging adults with disabilities aged 40 to 70 (M = 49.13, SD = 6.28; 52.7% female; 52.3% non-Hispanic white; 39.1% heterosexual; 95.5% married; 57.6% psychiatric disability) completed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging and Gerontology Research · Racial and Ethnic Identity Research · Disability Education and Employment
