Lawton Kathryn E, Gerdes Alyson C, Haack Lauren M, Schneider Brian
Department of Psychology, Marquette University, 604 N. 16th Street, Milwaukee, WI, 53233, USA,
Adm Policy Ment Health. 2014 Mar;41(2):189-204. doi: 10.1007/s10488-012-0447-3.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most prevalent mental health disorders of childhood. Despite the availability of several evidence-based interventions, Latino children are more likely than non-minority children to have an unmet need for services related to ADHD. Given that parental beliefs about the etiology of ADHD likely influence service utilization, research needs to focus on cultural factors that may influence parental beliefs about the etiology of child behavior problems. Thus, the goal of the current study was to investigate the role of acculturation and cultural values of familism, respect, spirituality, and traditional gender roles in explaining parental etiological beliefs about ADHD in a sample of Latino parents. Findings suggest that behavioral acculturation was not significantly correlated with biopsychosocial or sociological/spiritual etiological beliefs; however, the cultural values of familism and traditional gender roles were positively correlated with sociological/spiritual beliefs. Further, exploratory analyses suggested that after controlling for SES, familism and traditional gender roles accounted for 30.5 % of the total variance in sociological/spiritual beliefs about ADHD. Finally, post hoc analyses revealed that cultural values were associated with several individual belief categories within the sociological/spiritual domain, including beliefs about friends, spirituality, and nature disharmony. The current study supports the inclusion of etiological beliefs and cultural factors in research examining help-seeking and access to mental health services among Latino families and suggests that the incorporation of alternative etiological beliefs about child behavior may be an important factor in culturally-appropriate mental health services.
注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)是儿童期最常见的心理健康障碍之一。尽管有几种循证干预措施,但与非少数族裔儿童相比,拉丁裔儿童对ADHD相关服务的需求未得到满足的可能性更大。鉴于父母对ADHD病因的看法可能会影响服务的利用情况,研究需要关注可能影响父母对儿童行为问题病因看法的文化因素。因此,本研究的目的是调查文化适应以及家庭主义、尊重、灵性和传统性别角色等文化价值观在解释拉丁裔父母样本中对ADHD的病因信念方面所起的作用。研究结果表明,行为文化适应与生物心理社会或社会学/灵性病因信念没有显著相关性;然而,家庭主义和传统性别角色的文化价值观与社会学/灵性信念呈正相关。此外,探索性分析表明,在控制社会经济地位后,家庭主义和传统性别角色占ADHD社会学/灵性信念总方差的30.5%。最后,事后分析表明,文化价值观与社会学/灵性领域内的几个个体信念类别相关,包括对朋友、灵性和自然失调的信念。本研究支持在研究拉丁裔家庭寻求帮助和获得心理健康服务的过程中纳入病因信念和文化因素,并表明纳入关于儿童行为的替代病因信念可能是提供适合文化的心理健康服务的一个重要因素。