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“Do we not matter?!”: A qualitative exploration of vicarious racism stress in married Black Americans

Abstract

Objective

This study employed the marriage advantage framework to understand whether social support from spouses buffered the effects of vicarious racism on the mental health of married Blacks during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Background

Scholarship has underscored that interpersonal experiences with racism can lead to a plethora of negative mental health outcomes. However, the relationship between vicarious racism, or secondhand experiences of racism, and its attendant consequences to mental health remains understudied. Specifically, empirical work examining social factors, such as marital status, that may attenuate negative outcomes following exposure is scarce.

Method

Qualitative interviews of 16 married Black individuals were conducted to understand the impact of spousal support on the effects of vicarious racism. A combination of social media advertising and snowball sampling was used to recruit study participants.

Results

Findings suggest that vicarious racism is detrimental to the mental health of Black people. However, Black spouses were an important source of social support when managing the emotional toll of vicarious racism.

Conclusion

Participants’ spouses provided a space to express emotional distress and aided in positive coping through emotion regulation and joint activism.

Implications

Family-based interventions targeting experiences with vicarious racism are needed to support emotion management among minority couples.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 01/14/2026 | Link to this post on IFP |
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