Burns Courtney Julia, Saint Arnault Denise Marie
University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Issues Ment Health Nurs. 2021 Jan;42(1):38-45. doi: 10.1080/01612840.2020.1779882. Epub 2020 Jul 9.
Prior literature has shown the female Japanese population experiences higher susceptibility to mental health disorders. The causal influences of help-seeking for distressed women were investigated through analysis of 24 interviews of Japanese immigrant women in the Detroit Metropolitan Area. The Clinical Ethnographic Narrative Interview (CENI) was utilized as the interviewing technique, investigating Japanese culture as a determinant of personal wellness. This study was a grounded theory examination of the interactions among gender, social context, cultural displacement, and a causal model for Japanese women's distress experiences. The resulting theoretical model revealed the familial and social dynamics traditional to Japanese culture developed feelings of poor self-worth common amongst study participants. This negative perception of self was exacerbated by gendered challenges of expatriation and intense pressures within this region's Japanese migrant community. These findings show the need for increased contact with at-risk populations to understand their causal models and help-seeking behaviors and expectations.
先前的文献表明,日本女性人群更容易患心理健康障碍。通过对底特律都会区24名日本移民女性的访谈分析,研究了困境中女性寻求帮助的因果影响。采用临床民族志叙事访谈(CENI)作为访谈技术,将日本文化作为个人健康的一个决定因素进行研究。本研究是对性别、社会背景、文化迁移以及日本女性痛苦经历因果模型之间相互作用的扎根理论检验。由此产生的理论模型表明,日本文化传统中的家庭和社会动态在研究参与者中产生了普遍的自我价值感低下的感觉。这种对自我的负面认知因侨居的性别挑战和该地区日本移民社区内的巨大压力而加剧。这些发现表明,需要增加与高危人群的接触,以了解他们的因果模型、寻求帮助的行为和期望。