02280nas a2200253 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002260003500043653002100078653001500099653001400114653001900128653001100147653002600158100002300184700002800207245012200235856006700357300001000424490000700434520155800441022001301999020001402012 2020 d c12/2020bElsevier Espana S.L.U10aEthnic prejudice10aImmigrants10aPeruvians10aSocial support10aStress10aSubjective well-being1 aJosé Loayza-Rivas1 aJordi Fernández-Castro00aPerceived stress and well-being: The role of social support as a protective factor among Peruvian immigrants in Spain uhttps://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1134793720300191 a67-720 v263 aBackground Migration is a potentially stressful process due to the sociocultural changes and the adaptation processes that go along with it. However, social support can mitigate the impact of stress, ease the adaptation process and contribute to migrants’ overall well-being. The aim of this study was to explore to what extent social support buffers the effects of stress and ethnic prejudice on subjective well-being and physical symptoms in a Peruvian immigrant community in Spain. Method One hundred and thirty seven people participated in the study, 67.2% of them women and 32.8% men, with an age range between 19 and 64 years, who responded to self-report instruments through an online survey. The statistical analysis consisted of obtaining a structural equation model (SEM) in order to estimate the direct, indirect and total effects involved in the relationships between the study variables. Results Social support was shown to have a significant direct effect (β=.174, p=.017) on the participants’ degree of subjective well-being, as well as an indirect effect mediated by both stress and ethnic prejudice (β=.170, p<.001). No significant direct relationship was found between the degree of social support and the severity of participants’ physical symptoms. Conclusions The level of social support contributes to subjective well-being and acts as a protective factor against the effects of high levels of stress and ethnic prejudice, thus fostering immigrants’ process of adaptation to their new socio-cultural context. a11347937 a2174-0437