Literature DB >> 26190068

Mother-Youth Acculturation Gaps and Health-Risking/Emotional Problems among Latin-American Adolescents.

Margit Wiesner1, Consuelo Arbona1, Deborah M Capaldi2, Hyoun K Kim2, Charles D Kaplan3.   

Abstract

Second-generation Latin-American adolescents tend to show higher levels of various health-risking behaviors and emotional problems than first-generation Latin-American adolescents. This cross-sectional study of 40 mother-adolescent dyads examined the association of mother-youth acculturation gaps to youth adjustment problems. Intergenerational acculturation gaps were assessed as a bidimensional self-report component and a novel observational measurement component. The Latin-American adolescents were predominantly second-generation of Mexican descent (M age = 13.42 years, SD = 0.55). Most of the mothers were born in Mexico (M age = 39.18 years, SD = 5.17). Data were collected from mothers, adolescents, and coders, using questionnaires, structured interviews, and videotaped mother-youth interaction tasks. Findings revealed generally weak support for the acculturation gap-distress hypothesis. In addition, stronger relative adherence to their heritage culture by the adolescents was significantly (p < .05, ES = 0.15) related to less engagement in early health-risking sexual behaviors, possibly reflecting selective acculturation processes. Mother-youth acculturation gaps in orientation to the heritage culture were the most salient dimension, changing the focus on the original formulation of the acculturation gap-distress hypothesis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  acculturation; adolescents; emotional problems; health-risking behaviors; latin-american

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26190068     DOI: 10.1017/sjp.2015.52

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Span J Psychol        ISSN: 1138-7416            Impact factor:   1.264


  1 in total

Review 1.  Cultural Stressors and Depressive Symptoms in Latino/a Adolescents: An Integrative Review.

Authors:  Allison L McCord; Claire Burke Draucker; Silvia Bigatti
Journal:  J Am Psychiatr Nurses Assoc       Date:  2018-06-04       Impact factor: 2.385

  1 in total

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