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Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences
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Acculturation and Its Effect on Depressive Symptom Structure in a Sample of Mexican American Elders

David A. Chiriboga

University of South Florida, Tampa, dchiriboga{at}fmhi.usf.edu

Yuri Jang

University of South Florida, Tampa

Steve Banks

University of South Florida, Tampa

Giyeon Kim

University of South Florida, Tampa

In this study, we compared the depressive symptoms reported by Mexican American elders who scored higher and lower on a linguistic acculturation scale. Prevalence, equality of covariance matrices, equality of error variances, and factor structures were examined for the 20 items included in the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) Scale. The sample consisted of 3,050 community-dwelling Mexican Americans from five states. Significant differences were found on all parameters, indicating that level of acculturation is associated with pervasive differences in the way items are endorsed on the most commonly used inventory of depressive symptoms. Results add to literature suggesting that there may not be a universal structure to symptoms. Higher or lower scores may have different implications for people representing different cultures and/or stages of acculturation, something that both researchers and clinicians should be sensitive to when interpreting results of screening tests.

Key Words: acculturation • CES-D • Mexican American elders • cross-cultural instrument generalizability

Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 29, No. 1, 83-100 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0739986306295875


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