Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Volume 19, Issue 3, 2017, Pages 572-581

Model Minority Stereotype: Influence on Perceived Mental Health Needs of Asian Americans (Article)

Cheng A.W.* , Chang J. , O’Brien J. , Budgazad M.S. , Tsai J.
  • a Department of Psychology, University of Hartford, 200 Bloomfield Ave., East Hall 203I, West Hartford, CT 06117, United States
  • b Department of Psychology, Smith College, Northampton, MA, United States
  • c Department of Psychology, University of Hartford, 200 Bloomfield Ave., East Hall 203I, West Hartford, CT 06117, United States
  • d Department of Psychology, University of Hartford, 200 Bloomfield Ave., East Hall 203I, West Hartford, CT 06117, United States
  • e Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States

Abstract

This study examined the influence of the model minority stereotype on the perceived mental health functioning of Asian Americans. It was hypothesized that college students would perceive Asian Americans as having fewer mental health problems and clinical symptoms than Whites due to the model minority stereotype. Four hundred and twenty-five undergraduate students from a predominately White college campus in the American northeast were randomly exposed to one of four conditions: (1) a clinical vignette describing a White college student suffering from adjustment disorder; (2) the same vignette describing an Asian American college student; (3) a newspaper article describing a success story of Whites and the White clinical vignette; (4) the same newspaper article and clinical vignette describing an Asian American. Following exposure to one of the conditions, participants completed a memory recall task and measures of colorblindness, attitudes towards Asian Americans, attitudes towards out-group members, and perceived mental health functioning. Participants exposed to the vignettes primed with the positive/model minority stereotype perceived the target regardless of race/ethnicity as having better mental health functioning and less clinical symptoms than the condition without the stereotype. Additionally, the stereotype primer was found to be a modest predictor for the perception of mental health functioning in Asian American vignettes. Results shed light on the impact of the model minority stereotype on the misperception of Asian Americans’ mental health status, contributing to the invisibility or neglect of this minority group’s mental health needs. © 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York.

Author Keywords

Model minority stereotype Racial bias Mental health Decision-making Asian American

Index Keywords

Stereotyping Continental Population Groups ancestry group mental health human ethnology United States Young Adult Humans psychology attitude Adolescent Asian Americans male Asian American female Socioeconomic Factors socioeconomics sex factor Sex Factors Mental Recall recall

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84973101010&doi=10.1007%2fs10903-016-0440-0&partnerID=40&md5=3bdaa84a59bf2e77e760dc91bb5e4f7a

DOI: 10.1007/s10903-016-0440-0
ISSN: 15571912
Cited by: 7
Original Language: English