Authors
Gregory E Miller, Sheldon Cohen, Denise Janicki-Deverts, Gene H Brody, Edith Chen
Publication date
2016/11
Journal
Health Psychology
Volume
35
Issue
11
Pages
1225
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Objective
Studies have revealed a phenomenon called skin-deep resilience, which develops in upwardly mobile African American youth. They perform well in school, maintain good mental health, and avoid legal problems. Despite outward indications of success, they also show evidence of worse health in biomarker studies. Here we extend this research, asking whether it manifests in differential susceptibility to upper respiratory infection, and if it emerges in European Americans as well.
Methods
The sample included 514 adults in good health, as judged by physician examination and laboratory testing. Participants completed questionnaires about lifecourse socioeconomic conditions, conscientiousness, psychosocial adjustment, and lifestyle factors. They were subsequently inoculated with a rhinovirus that causes upper respiratory infection, and monitored in quarantine for 5 days the development of illness …
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