# Unmasking the impact: Racial microaggressions and the health consequences for Latinas in the United States

**Authors:** Jeannine Ríos, Mindy Menn, George King, Trey L. DeJong, John Terrizzi, Ann Oyare Amuta-Jimenez, Sugy Choi, Sugy Choi, Jenna Scaramanga, Karli Montague-Cardoso

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmen.0000416 · 2025-08-26

## TL;DR

This study explores how racial microaggressions affect the mental and physical health of Latinas in the U.S., finding that certain types of discrimination are linked to anxiety and gastrointestinal issues.

## Contribution

The study specifically examines the health impact of racial microaggressions on Latinas, a group underrepresented in prior research.

## Key findings

- Perceived racial microaggressions like Low Achieving and Sexualization are linked to increased anxiety and gastrointestinal problems in Latinas.
- Environmental microaggressions appear to mitigate the negative health effects of other types of racial microaggressions.
- The study used canonical correlation analysis to identify statistically significant relationships between microaggressions and health outcomes.

## Abstract

Researchers conducted an exploratory analysis of the relationship between perceived racial microaggressions and physical and mental health outcomes among Latinas living in the United States. The history of discrimination in the US has created lasting health disparities. Racial microaggressions, subtle forms of discrimination directed towards people of color, have become ubiquitous in the U.S. Research focused on Latinas is limited. This study used a descriptive and analytical cross-sectional design, collecting data online from December 2021 to February 2022, using the Racial Microaggressions Scale (RMAS). A Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA) was conducted using the six RMAS sub-scales (Foreigner, Sexualization, Criminality, Low Achieving, Invisibility and Environmental) and three DASS (Depression, Anxiety and Stress). The sample included 659 self-identified Latinas’ data representing 36 states. The full model was statistically significant Wilks’s
λ = .907 criterion, F (18, 1887.05) = 3.65, p < .001. with the r2 type effect size was.093. Another CCA was conducted using the six microaggressions sub-scales previously mentioned as predictors of physical health outcomes using the Physical Health Questionnaire (PHQ) which has four sub-scales. This model was also statistically significant using the Wilks’s
λ = .872 criterion, F(24, 2286.23) = 3.82, p < .001. This study found that perceived racial microaggressions in the forms of Low Achieving and Sexualization were associated with negative health outcomes for Latinas in the forms of increased anxiety, and gastrointestinal problems. In addition, when Environmental microaggressions are present the overall effects are lessened. In addition, when Environmental microaggressions are present the overall effects are lessened. Findings revealed that perceived racial microaggressions, particularly Low Achieving and Sexualization, are associated with negative health outcomes for Latinas, particularly including increased anxiety, and gastrointestinal issues, while Environmental microaggressions mitigated these effects.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Anxiety (MESH:D001007), gastrointestinal issues (MESH:D005767), Depression (MESH:D003866), gastrointestinal problems (MESH:D012817)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

33 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12798488/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12798488