Racial discrimination and adverse childhood experiences predicting depressive symptoms and developmental assets: Testing cultural socialization and preparation for bias as moderators among Black adolescents and caregivers
Racial discrimination and adverse childhood experiences predicting depressive symptoms and developmental assets: Testing cultural socialization and preparation for bias as moderators among Black adolescents and caregivers

Racial discrimination and adverse childhood experiences predicting depressive symptoms and developmental assets: Testing cultural socialization and preparation for bias as moderators among Black adolescents and caregivers

J Res Adolesc. 2025 Mar;35(1):e13056. doi: 10.1111/jora.13056.

ABSTRACT

The current study examined whether adverse childhood experiences and racial discrimination predicted adolescents’ internal developmental assets, external developmental assets, and depressive symptoms. We also tested whether these relations were buffered by aspects of caregivers’ reports of ethnic-racial socialization efforts (i.e., cultural socialization and preparation for bias). Participants were Black adolescents 12 to 17 years of age (Mage = 15.09, SD = 1.36) and their caregivers. Findings indicated that adolescents’ racial discrimination experiences and adverse childhood experiences were associated with less internal assets, less external assets, and greater depressive symptoms. Preparation for bias was a protective moderator in two associations, such that at low levels of preparation for bias, racial discrimination predicted less external assets, but this relation became non-significant at high levels of preparation for bias. Similarly, at low levels of preparation for bias, adverse childhood experiences predicted greater depressive symptoms, but this relation became non-significant at high levels of preparation for bias. Caregivers’ cultural socialization was also protective in that at low levels of cultural socialization, adverse childhood experiences predicted less internal developmental assets, but this relation became non-significant at high levels of cultural socialization. Adverse childhood experiences and racial discrimination contribute to poorer outcomes, but caregivers’ efforts to teach their children about their race, ethnicity, and culture are protective in some of these associations. Findings highlight that it is important to focus on both risk factors and protective family cultural processes to promote Black adolescents’ positive developmental and mental health.

PMID:39731359 | DOI:10.1111/jora.13056