Deidre M. Anglin
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Deidre M. Anglin.
Development and Psychopathology | 2009
Thomas N. Crawford; Patricia Cohen; Henian Chen; Deidre M. Anglin; Miriam K. Ehrensaft
Extended maternal separations before age 5 were evaluated as a predictor of long-term risk for offspring borderline personality disorder (BPD) symptoms in longitudinal data from a large random community sample. Early separations from mother predicted elevations in BPD symptoms assessed repeatedly from early adolescence to middle adulthood. Early separations also predicted a slower than normal rate of decline in symptoms with age. Other theoretically grounded risks were examined and shown to predict elevated BPD symptoms over the developmental trajectory. Long-term effects of early separations were largely independent of childhood temperament, child abuse, maternal problems, and parenting risks. These data provide the first prospectively collected data on the developmental course of BPD symptoms and suggest a series of environmental and other influences on these very disabling problems.
American Journal of Community Psychology | 2008
Deidre M. Anglin; Philip M. Alberti; Bruce G. Link; Jo C. Phelan
Members of racial/ethnic minority groups are less likely than Caucasians to access mental health services despite recent evidence of more favorable attitudes regarding treatment effectiveness. The present study explored this discrepancy by examining racial differences in beliefs about how the natural course and seriousness of mental illnesses relate to perceived treatment effectiveness. The analysis is based on a nationally representative sample of 583 Caucasian and 82 African American participants in a vignette experiment about people living with mental illness. While African Americans were more likely than Caucasians to believe that mental health professionals could help individuals with schizophrenia and major depression, they were also more likely to believe mental health problems would improve on their own. This belief was unrelated to beliefs about treatment effectiveness. These findings suggest that a belief in treatment effectiveness may not increase service utilization among African Americans who are more likely to believe treatment is unnecessary.
Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology | 2007
Deidre M. Anglin; Jay C. Wade
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of racial socialization and racial identity on adjustment in Black college students. Self-report questionnaires were administered to 141 Black college students from a predominantly White university and racially diverse college. The findings suggest that racial socialization positively contributes to academic adjustment. An internalized-multicultural identity positively contributed to overall college adjustment, and pre-encounter miseducated racial identity negatively contributed. Internalized Afrocentric racial identity was negatively related to overall college adjustment. Implications for multicultural social scientists and directions for future research are discussed.
Journal of Psychology and Theology | 2005
Deidre M. Anglin; Kamieka O. S. Gabriel; Nadine J. Kaslow
This study was designed to examine the relationship between suicide acceptability and religious well-being, and to investigate the differences that may exist between African American suicide attempters and non-attempters on these two concepts. Two hundred low-income, African Americans were administered self-report questionnaires measuring suicide acceptability and religious well-being. Findings indicated that suicide acceptability was negatively related to religious well-being for both suicide attempters and non-attempters. There was also a significant difference between these two groups on suicide acceptability and religious well-being. Results were consistent with previous research that suggests that African Americans who attempt suicide endorse higher levels of suicide acceptability and lower levels of religious well-being than do their nonattempter counterparts. These findings have important implications for culturally-competent community programming and community mental health programs that serve low-income ethnic minority populations.
Schizophrenia Research | 2008
Deidre M. Anglin; Patricia Cohen; Henian Chen
Early childhood experiences influence the capacity for healthy social and emotional development. The present study uses longitudinal data to determine whether early maternal separation predicted the subsequent development of schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) symptoms assessed repeatedly from early adolescence over the following 20 years. Within this community sample (N=766), multilevel linear regression analyses revealed the duration of separation from mother in the first 2 years of life predicted elevated SPD symptoms. This relationship was specific to children with mother-reported early angry emotional behavior. These results provide support for the role of early childhood psychosocial risk factors in the development of subsequent schizophrenia spectrum symptoms in emotionally vulnerable children.
Journal of Language and Social Psychology | 2006
Deidre M. Anglin; Arthur L. Whaley
This study explored the relationship of racial/ethnic labels to racial socialization and racial identity in a sample of 123 college students of African descent. Logistic regression analyses revealed that individuals self-labeling as African American reported more racial socialization experiences emphasizing cultural survival than those who self-labeled as West Indian/Caribbean, African, or Black. The self-label Black was not associated with racial socialization and was negatively associated with an Afrocentric racial identity.
Schizophrenia Research | 2009
Deidre M. Anglin; Arielle D. Stanford; Jill M. Harkavy-Friedman; Raymond R. Goetz; Paul J. Rosenfield; Dolores Malaspina
This study examined the relationship between having a family history of affective disorder and neuropsychological functioning and PANSS symptoms in schizophrenia patients falling into four exclusive family history groups (affective spectrum disorders, schizophrenia spectrum disorders, both, or neither). Schizophrenia patients with a family history of affective illness had the best performance on IQ tests and executive function measures. Symptoms showed fewer family history group differences. Schizophrenia patients with a family history of affective disorder may be a distinct subtype in the group of schizophrenias and may be biologically more similar to patients with serious affective disorder.
Journal of Black Psychology | 2006
Deidre M. Anglin
Shifting, written by journalist Charisse Jones and clinical psychologist Dr. Kumea Shorter-Gooden, provides a comprehensive synopsis of African American women’s simultaneous battle with racism and sexism. The book is largely based on an extensive research project called the Women’s Voices Project, which was conducted with 333 African American women across five U.S. cities. Jones and Shorter-Gooden give life to the phenomena they call “shifting” through the many voices and experiences of the courageous women they interviewed. Throughout the 10 chapters, the authors weave research findings with quotes from identified participants, vividly demonstrating the ways in which racism and sexism uniquely affect the social, emotional, and spiritual lives of African American women.
Psychiatric Services | 2006
Deidre M. Anglin; Bruce G. Link; Jo C. Phelan
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2008
Deidre M. Anglin; Dolores Malaspina