Zúñiga María Luisa, Mulholland Kayla, Lewin-Fischer Pedro, Martinez San Román Isela, Toledo Lidiane, Urada Lianne
School of Social Work, College of Health and Human Services, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, United States.
Sección de Lingüística, Centro INAH Yucatán, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Mexico City, Mexico.
Front Psychiatry. 2024 May 14;15:1368619. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1368619. eCollection 2024.
Parental migration is common in Mexico and Latin America, where individuals pursue work to improve their family's economic opportunities and children remain home in their community under the care of the remaining parent or extended family. A research gap remains about the impact of parental migration on mental health and substance use in children who remain at home. The current study explored risk and resilience factors relating to mental health and substance use among Mexican youth remaining at home when one or more parents migrate.
This qualitative study applied attachment theory and thematic analysis to analyze 26 in-depth interviews with youth (17-21 years old), parents, and a focus group with high-school teachers in a town with history of migration both domestically and internationally (Yucatan, México).
Respondents across groups perceived that parental migration was related to 1) less parental/caregiver oversight and support due to family demands on the remaining parent and 2) the deterioration of youth mental health. Lack of youth oversight and the poor mental health of youth were perceived as drivers of youth seeking out and consuming alcohol and substances. In terms of parental remittances, youth reported observing among their peers increased access to material goods such as clothing and technology (e.g., smartphones) and increased access to alcohol. Resilience factors included parental awareness of the role of good communication with youth and teachers and youth access to and utilization of self-care resources such as mutual aid meetings for substance use recovery.
Poor mental health and substance use among youth and parents were perceived to be related to parental absence, stressors on the remaining parent or family, and undermined healthy parent-child attachment. Youth themselves are a source of insight for recommendations on interventions to reduce youth isolation and substance use risk. We recommend the intentional engagement of youth in developing intervention research and tailoring evidence-based interventions to mitigate parental absence's impact and promote parent-child attachment for youth and families remaining at home.
父母移民在墨西哥和拉丁美洲很常见,在这些地方,人们为了改善家庭经济状况而外出工作,孩子则留在社区由另一方父母或大家庭照顾。关于父母移民对留守孩子心理健康和物质使用的影响,仍然存在研究空白。本研究探讨了父母一方或双方移民时,墨西哥留守青少年心理健康和物质使用方面的风险及复原力因素。
这项定性研究运用依恋理论和主题分析法,对一个有国内和国际移民历史的城镇(墨西哥尤卡坦州)的26名青少年(17 - 21岁)、父母以及一个高中教师焦点小组进行了深度访谈。
各群体的受访者都认为,父母移民与以下两点有关:1)由于家庭对留守父母的需求,父母/照顾者的监督和支持减少;2)青少年心理健康恶化。青少年缺乏监督以及心理健康不佳被视为青少年寻求并使用酒精和毒品的驱动因素。在父母汇款方面,青少年报告说,他们观察到同龄人中有更多机会获得衣服和科技产品(如智能手机)等物质商品,也有更多机会接触到酒精。复原力因素包括父母意识到与青少年和教师良好沟通的作用,以及青少年能够获取并利用自我照顾资源,如互助戒毒康复会议。
青少年和父母的心理健康不佳及物质使用被认为与父母不在身边、留守父母或家庭的压力源以及健康的亲子依恋关系受到破坏有关。青少年自身是提出减少青少年孤立感和物质使用风险干预建议的重要信息来源。我们建议有意让青少年参与干预研究的制定,并根据实际情况调整循证干预措施,以减轻父母不在身边的影响,促进留守青少年和家庭的亲子依恋关系。