Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Ethn Health. 2021 May;26(4):530-553. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2018.1514451. Epub 2018 Aug 24.
Community, school, family, and individual factors protect against mental illness in general samples of adolescents. How these assets apply to Somali youth resettled to the United States (U.S.), a group with significant trauma exposure, remains unclear. We aimed to quantify which protective factors are associated with lower prevalence of depressive symptoms, suicidality, and self-injury among Somali youth in the U.S. compared with their non-Hispanic white peers. Participants consisted of 8th, 9th, and 11th grade respondents to the 2016 Minnesota Student Survey, an anonymous school-administered statewide survey with 85.5% school district participation, who identified as Somali ethnicity ( = 1552) or as non-Hispanic white ( = 80,583). Multivariable logistic regression assessed odds of depressive symptoms, suicidal ideation and attempts, and self-harm, using eight protective factors (i.e. internal developmental assets, school engagement, empowerment, and family and teacher connectedness, caring adults and after-school activity frequency and quality) as independent variables. Models were run separately for Somali and white youth. Somali youth reported similar rates of depressive symptoms, but lower levels of suicidal ideation or attempts and self-harm behaviors than their white peers (< 0.001). All eight protective factors were associated with outcomes in the expected direction for white youth. For Somali youth, internal developmental assets (aOR 0.79, 95% CI: 0.65-0.97), empowerment (aOR 0.58, 95% CI: 0.45-0.73), family connectedness (aOR 0.60, 95% CI: 0.51-0.71), perception of caring adults in the community (aOR: 0.84, 95% CI: 0.76-0.92), and quality of after-school activities (aOR: 0.72, 95% CI: 0.61-0.86) were protective against depressive symptoms, with similar patterns for other outcomes. Other school factors protected Somali youth less consistently. Previously established protective factors against mental illness, particularly school factors, do not universally apply to Somali youth. Interventions that strengthen individual, family, or community factors, or that increase the relevance of school factors, should be explored for these youth.
社区、学校、家庭和个人因素通常可以预防青少年的精神疾病。这些因素如何适用于被安置到美国的索马里青年,这群人经历了巨大的创伤,目前还不清楚。我们的目的是量化哪些保护因素与美国索马里青年中较低的抑郁症状、自杀意念和自残发生率相关,与他们的非西班牙裔白人同龄人相比。参与者是 2016 年明尼苏达州学生调查的八年级、九年级和十一年级的答卷人,这是一项匿名的全州学校管理调查,有 85.5%的学区参与,他们自认为是索马里族裔(1552 人)或非西班牙裔白人(80583 人)。使用八项保护因素(即内部发展资产、学校参与度、赋权、家庭和教师联系、关爱成年人以及课后活动的频率和质量)作为自变量,多变量逻辑回归评估了抑郁症状、自杀意念和尝试以及自残的可能性。分别为索马里和白人青年运行模型。索马里青年报告的抑郁症状发生率相似,但自杀意念或尝试以及自残行为的发生率低于他们的白人同龄人(<0.001)。所有八项保护因素对白人青年的预期结果都有相关性。对于索马里青年,内部发展资产(OR=0.79,95%CI:0.65-0.97)、赋权(OR=0.58,95%CI:0.45-0.73)、家庭联系(OR=0.60,95%CI:0.51-0.71)、对社区中关爱成年人的感知(OR=0.84,95%CI:0.76-0.92)以及课外活动的质量(OR=0.72,95%CI:0.61-0.86)对抑郁症状有保护作用,其他结果也有类似的模式。其他学校因素对索马里青年的保护作用则不那么一致。先前确定的预防精神疾病的保护因素,特别是学校因素,并不完全适用于索马里青年。应该为这些青年探索加强个人、家庭或社区因素,或增加学校因素相关性的干预措施。