Coping with COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism and depressive symptoms: The role of social support.

Publication date: Feb 17, 2025

Growing evidence highlights the adverse mental health consequences linked to the surge in COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism. However, the buffering role of social support in the context of the uniquely distressing experiences of COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism remains uncertain. Thus, our study aimed to examine the link between COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism and depressive symptoms among Asian American emerging adults and to assess whether social support might moderate this relationship. Using data from 139 Asian American participants (M = 23. 04), we conducted moderation analyses using the PROCESS macro with COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism predicting depressive symptoms and social support as the moderator. COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism significantly predicted more severe depressive symptoms. Social support moderated this relationship, but only among those with low exposure to COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism. Further, results indicate that the protective benefits of social support diminish among Asian American individuals exposed to moderate to high levels of COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism. Results were similar across subtypes of emotional and instrumental support. These findings bring attention to a greater need for culturally sensitive social support systems that are responsive to specific forms of COVID-19-related anti-Asian racism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

Concepts Keywords
American American
Asian Anti
Covid Asian
Depressive Coping
Moderator Covid
Depressive
Evidence
Growing
Moderate
Racism
Related
Relationship
Social
Support
Symptoms

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH depressive symptoms
disease IDO role
disease IDO process
disease MESH Long Covid

Original Article

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