# Cortisol Synchrony in Adolescents and Their Parents

> **NIH NIH R03** · UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON · 2020 · $78,772

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Despite their citizenship, over 3.2 million US-born Latino children of undocumented parents (i.e., those in
“mixed-status families”) experience chronic stress associated with potential or actual forced deportation of their
parents. Relative to US-born Latino children in documented-status families, US-born Latino children in mixed-
status families are exposed to additional acute and chronic stressors placing them at elevated risk for
substance use, anxiety and depression. The absence of research using direct assessment of family
documentation status impedes the ability to determine structural burden of stress exposure and its health
consequences. Further, chronic stress, such as the burden of deportation stress within immigrant families, can
be culturally bound and standardized survey measures may not be indicative of the negative health impact that
physiological stress has within the family environment. The objective of this study is to determine the potential
mental and behavioral health vulnerabilities of US-born Latino adolescents (ages 12- 16) with undocumented
parents. This will be done through a dyadic bio-behavioral project based on central principles of community–
based research. The primary aim is to describe cortisol synchrony in Latino adolescent-parent dyads, and
compare the synchrony profiles of dyads in mixed-status families with those in documented families. Aim 2 is
to delineate variability in self-appraised stressors among mixed-status and documented-status US-born Latino
adolescent-immigrant parent dyads. Aim 3 will describe the magnitude of correlations of cortisol synchrony with
parent and adolescent self-appraised stressors and youth self-reports of substance use, anxiety, and
depression. This study will enroll n=25 US-born Mexican adolescent-immigrant parent dyads from mixed-status
families and n=25 US-born Mexican adolescent-immigrant parent dyads from documented-status families who
reside in the Houston-area. Direct assessments and self-reported surveys will be utilized. Saliva samples will
be assayed for cortisol. Adolescents and parents will report on deportation stress, acculturative stress (SAFE-
R), and economic stress (HSI-A and HSI-2 subscales). Adolescents will also report on substance use, anxiety
(PAI), and depression (CES-D). This study is highly innovative for three reasons: (1) Explicit focus on a
dominant contemporary issue – the management of US-born children and their undocumented immigrant
parents – advanced under the previous administration but currently being called into question; (2) While there
is a long history of studies focused on individuals' diurnal pattern of cortisol, there is a dearth of research using
a dyadic bio-behavioral approach to capture cortisol synchrony among adolescent-immigrant parent
households; and (3) A refinement in methodologies by using complementary objective and subjective
assessments of stress to avoid potential ambiguity in health effects, recogni...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9889157
- **Project number:** 5R03HD098379-02
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON
- **Principal Investigator:** Daphne C. Hernandez
- **Activity code:** R03 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $78,772
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-03-07 → 2023-02-28

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9889157

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9889157, Cortisol Synchrony in Adolescents and Their Parents (5R03HD098379-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9889157. Licensed CC0.

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