Online Racism, Rumination, and Vigilance: Impact on Distress, Loneliness, and Alcohol Use

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Abstract

We examined the potential anticipatory response (rumination, vigilance) associated with online racism and its impact on psychological distress, loneliness, and alcohol use severity. With a sample of 407 racial minority adults, we conducted a path analysis to examine the indirect relation of online racism on our outcome variables via online racism-related rumination and offline racism-related vigilance. Online racism was significantly linked to psychological distress, alcohol use severity, and loneliness. Rumination and vigilance explained significant indirect relations between online racism and psychological distress and loneliness. Only rumination explained the significant indirect relation between online racism and alcohol use severity. Posthoc multigroup analysis suggested that the path model estimates for the full sample applied equivalently to the African American/Black, Asian/Asian American, and Latinx/Hispanic American groups. Online racism is likely an unjust burden for racial minority individuals that may give rise to prolonged rumination and anticipation about facing racial discrimination in their offline world.

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APA

Keum, B. T. H., & Li, X. (2023). Online Racism, Rumination, and Vigilance: Impact on Distress, Loneliness, and Alcohol Use. Counseling Psychologist, 51(3), 422–448. https://doi.org/10.1177/00110000221143521

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