Longitudinal associations between adolescent skin color satisfaction and adult health outcomes in Black women.
Pubmed ID: 38059930
Pubmed Central ID: PMC10939857
Journal: Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association
Publication Date: April 1, 2024
MeSH Terms: Humans, Adult, Female, Adolescent, Self Concept, Body Image, Skin Pigmentation, Feeding and Eating Disorders, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Bulimia, Personal Satisfaction
Grants: R01 HD073568, R01 DK128575, R01 HL158555, R01 AG059677
Authors: Epel ES, Laraia BA, Tomiyama AJ, Parker JE, Enders CK, Mujahid MS, Fitzpatrick SL
Cite As: Parker JE, Enders CK, Fitzpatrick SL, Mujahid MS, Laraia BA, Epel ES, Tomiyama AJ. Longitudinal associations between adolescent skin color satisfaction and adult health outcomes in Black women. Health Psychol 2024 Apr;43(4):289-297. Epub 2023 Dec 7.
Studies:
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although emerging studies examine the inverse relationship between body satisfaction and disordered eating for Black women, it has not been established how racially salient aspects of body satisfaction may have implications for eating behaviors and longitudinal health outcomes. METHOD: In a longitudinal sample of 455 Black women, we examined whether skin color satisfaction across ages 10-15 was directly related to adult health outcomes at age 40 (e.g., disordered eating, self-esteem, self-reported health, depressive symptoms, and cardiovascular risk). We also investigated the indirect impact of skin color satisfaction on adult health, mediated by body satisfaction, and binge eating. RESULTS: No significant direct or indirect effects of adolescent skin color satisfaction were observed for depressive symptoms or cardiovascular health outcomes. At ages 10 and 12, skin color satisfaction had negative and positive direct effects, respectively, on self-esteem. At age 15, greater skin color satisfaction was directly associated with greater self-reported health. Post hoc analyses revealed that when additionally accounting for adolescent body satisfaction, greater skin color satisfaction was indirectly associated with greater self-esteem and self-reported health, alongside lower cardiovascular risk. CONCLUSIONS: Although previous research suggests that in adolescence, Black girls' skin color satisfaction affects both body satisfaction and disordered eating behaviors, this association does not hold into midlife. Rather, post hoc analyses suggest that the lasting effects of adolescent skin color satisfaction are mediated by the longitudinal stability of body satisfaction, which in turn, is associated with adult health outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).