Institute for Health Equity and Social Justice Research, Northeastern University.
Department of Psychiatry, Boston Children's Hospital.
Am J Orthopsychiatry. 2021;91(2):280-293. doi: 10.1037/ort0000524. Epub 2020 Dec 7.
In this study, we examined the relationships among discrimination and mental health for Somali young adults, a group at risk for an unfavorable context of reception, and the way in which individual- and community-level factors explain these associations. The present study drew upon data collected during the first wave of the Somali Youth Longitudinal Study, a community-based participatory research project focused on understanding and supporting the healthy development of Somali young adults in four different regions in North America: Boston, MA, Minneapolis, MN, and Portland/Lewiston, ME in the United States and Toronto, Canada. Somali men and women aged 18-30 participated in quantitative interviews that included questions about their health, their neighborhoods, and their thoughts and feelings about their resettlement communities (N = 439). Results indicate that discrimination has a direct effect on worse mental health; this effect was mediated through both individual (marginalized acculturation style) and community-level (sense of belonging) factors. These findings suggest that factors associated with a receiving society's attitudes and behaviors, in addition to its structural supports and constraints, may be particularly important in understanding immigrant mental health. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
在这项研究中,我们研究了歧视与索马里青年成年人心理健康之间的关系,这是一个面临不利接纳环境风险的群体,以及个体和社区层面的因素如何解释这些关联。本研究基于索马里青年纵向研究的第一波数据,这是一个基于社区的参与式研究项目,旨在理解和支持索马里青年成年人在北美四个不同地区(美国的马萨诸塞州波士顿、明尼苏达州明尼阿波利斯和缅因州波特兰/刘易斯顿,以及加拿大的多伦多)的健康发展。18-30 岁的索马里男性和女性参与了定量访谈,其中包括有关他们的健康、他们的社区以及他们对重新安置社区的想法和感受的问题(N=439)。结果表明,歧视对心理健康产生直接影响;这种影响通过个体(边缘化的文化适应方式)和社区层面(归属感)因素来调节。这些发现表明,与接收社会的态度和行为相关的因素,除了其结构支持和限制之外,可能对于理解移民心理健康尤为重要。