Division of Population Behavioral Health (R Ijadi-Maghsoodi, K Lee, and S Kataoka), Jane and Terry Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles, Calif; Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences (R Ijadi-Maghsoodi, JI Meza, and S Kataoka), University of California, Los Angeles, Calif; VA Health Service Research and Development (HSR&D) (R Ijadi-Maghsoodi), Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation and Policy (CSHIIP), VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, Calif.
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences (R Ijadi-Maghsoodi, JI Meza, and S Kataoka), University of California, Los Angeles, Calif.
Acad Pediatr. 2024 Jul;24(5S):32-41. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2023.11.007.
Immigrant students and families experience disproportionate exposure to trauma, immigration-related stress, structural inequities, and poor access to mental health and social services which can lead to mental health inequities. Immigrant students and their families also have many strengths that can buffer potential negative mental health outcomes. Schools, which address social and emotional development in addition to academic achievement, are critical institutions that can play a unique role in enhancing the strengths and responding to the needs of immigrant students and families. In this review, we adapt the Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations to acknowledge the contextual and macro-level factors (e.g., relevant policies, environmental influences, and structural factors) and the predisposing, enabling, and need factors that immigrant students and families experience and impact access to school mental health and social services. We discuss school-based interventions that show efficacy for improving mental health outcomes and focus on addressing acculturative stress among immigrant students. We also discuss models to address social determinants of health need among immigrant students and families within schools, including the community schools model applied to immigrant students and families. We conclude this review by providing recommendations and strategies for pediatricians and schools to transform school-based supports for immigrant students and families and promote equitable outcomes. Our recommendations include incorporating multi-level school supports for addressing mental health, social need, and acculturative stress among immigrant students, along with reinforcing the strengths of immigrant students, and promoting school collaborations with pediatricians, school-based health centers, and trusted community partners.
移民学生和家庭经历不成比例的创伤暴露、与移民相关的压力、结构性不平等以及获得心理健康和社会服务的机会不足,这些因素可能导致心理健康的不平等。移民学生和他们的家庭也有许多优势,可以缓冲潜在的负面心理健康结果。学校除了重视学术成就外,还注重社会和情感发展,是可以在增强移民学生和家庭的优势并满足其需求方面发挥独特作用的关键机构。在这篇综述中,我们采用了易损性人群行为模型,以承认移民学生和家庭经历的背景和宏观层面因素(例如相关政策、环境影响和结构性因素)以及易感性、赋权和需求因素,这些因素会影响他们获得学校心理健康和社会服务的机会。我们讨论了对改善心理健康结果显示出疗效的基于学校的干预措施,并重点关注移民学生的文化适应压力。我们还讨论了在学校内解决移民学生和家庭健康社会决定因素需求的模型,包括应用于移民学生和家庭的社区学校模式。我们通过为儿科医生和学校提供建议和策略来结束这篇综述,以转变对移民学生和家庭的基于学校的支持,并促进公平结果。我们的建议包括在学校层面采取多层次的支持措施来解决移民学生的心理健康、社会需求和文化适应压力,同时增强移民学生的优势,并促进与儿科医生、学校的健康中心和可信赖的社区合作伙伴的学校合作。