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This Project Used the Following Measures: **Discrimination** was assessed with the validated Brief Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire - Community Version (PEDQ-CVB) with Lifetime and Past Week Discrimination scales. Brondolo E, Kelly KP, Coakley V, et al. The Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire: Development and Preliminary Validation of a Community Version 1. Journal of Applied Social Psychology. 2005;35(2):335-365. doi:10.1111/j.1559-1816.2005.tb02124.x Blair IV, Danyluck C, Judd CM, et al. Validation of the Brief Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire-Community Version in American Indians. Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol. 2021;27(1):47-59. doi:10.1037/cdp0000419 **Food Consumption** was assessed with a measure adapted from the Special Diabetes Program for American Indians Diabetes Prevention Demonstration Project. Participants indicated the number of days in the previous week they ate each item listed (response options: None in 7 days; 1-2 times in 7 days; 3-4 times in 7 days; 5-6 times in 7 days; 1+ times every day). Unhealthy items include processed or red meat, fried foods, sugary foods, sugary drinks, salty foods, high-fat dairy, and starchy or white grains. The healthy consumption items include fruits or vegetables, low-fat fish or poultry, whole grains, nuts and legumes, and low-fat dairy. Teufel-Shone NI, Jiang L, Beals J, et al. Demographic characteristics and food choices of participants in the special diabetes program for american Indians diabetes prevention demonstration project. Ethnicity and Health. 2015;20(4):327-340. doi:10.1080/13557858.2014.921890 **Major Life Stress** was measured through a checklist of 10 stressful events, adapted from Holmes and Rahe: death of a close family member or loved one, separation or divorce, detention in jail, major financial problems, major legal issues, major changes in family situation, serious health issue, serious issue with employment, major changes to living conditions, or victim of major crime. Participants were asked to indicate whether each event had happened to them in the last 12 months. Holmes T. The Holmes-Rahe Life Stress Scale. Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 1967;2. **Demographic variables** included self-reported age (in years), race/ethnicity, and gender. Education was scored as having no more than a high school diploma vs. some college or more education. Economic status in the New York sample was operationalized as the percent of residents in the participant’s neighborhood living at or below poverty level. Data were obtained from the American Community Survey (https://geomap.ffiec.gov/FFIECGeocMap/GeocodeMap1.aspx), based on the address participants provided. Economic status in the AISH sample was calculated from numbers provided on household income and the number of individuals living in the home, as a rough percentage of the national poverty level. Data were analyzed with the code shown in attached file. Requests for deidentified data should be sent to Dr. Elizabeth Brondolo, St. John's University: brondole@stjohns.edu
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