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Title page for ETD etd-06182009-101014


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Obasaju, Mayowa
URN etd-06182009-101014
Title Can I talk to you? Sociopolitical factors and their relation to symptoms and treatments of Social Anxiety in a sample of African Americans with Social Anxiety
Degree Ph.D.
Department Psychology
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Page Anderson, PhD Committee Chair
Julia Perilla, PhD Committee Member
Leslie Jackson, PhD Committee Member
Roderick Watts, PhD Committee Member
Keywords
  • African Americans
  • Social Anxiety
  • Cogntiive Behavioral Therapy
  • fear of confirming stereotypes
  • attrition rates
  • Public Speaking Anxiety
Date of Defense 2007-12-07
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
This study is exploratory in nature and focuses on the relation between the individual and macrosystems by investigating the link between African Americans’ fear of confirming stereotypes and their experience with symptoms and treatments for social anxiety. This study hypothesizes that 1) among a sample of African Americans diagnosed with social anxiety, there will be a significant, positive relationship between African-Americans’ self-reported concerns over confirming stereotypes relevant to both social anxiety and their own self-reported levels of social anxiety, 2) significantly more African Americans will drop-out of therapy than Caucasians, 3) amongst African Americans, significantly more will drop out of group therapy than individual therapy, 4) the racial composition of the group will matter, such that more African Americans will drop out of groups where they are the only African American participant, compared to if there are other African Americans in the group, and 5) the presence of an African American co-therapist will impact attrition from group treatment, with higher attrition rates in groups without an African American co-therapist, compared to if there is one. Thirty-four participants, 23 females and 11 males, who self-identified as African Americans and forty-four participants, 23 females and 21 males, who self-identified as Caucasian took part in this study. Results did not show a relation between stereotype confirmation concern and social anxiety. Regarding attrition, results showed that significantly more African Americans dropped out of therapy than Caucasians. Additionally, more African Americans dropped out of group therapy than individual therapy. There was no impact of therapist ethnicity or the presence of other African Americans on attrition rates, though these tests were underpowered.

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