| Literature DB >> 26420162 |
May Yeh1,2,3, Kristen McCabe4,5, Sawssan Ahmed6,4,7, Duyen Trang6,4, William Ganger4,8.
Abstract
Sociocultural factors were examined in relationship to parent-therapist agreement on beliefs about the etiology of mental health problems in a sample of youth receiving outpatient mental health services (n = 277 parents). When examined individually, racial/ethnic match was unrelated, but higher parental affinity to mainstream American culture, higher parent education level, and greater similarity in parent and therapist scores on affinity to mainstream American culture were all significantly associated with greater parent-therapist co-endorsement of etiological explanations, while higher parental affinity to an alternative/indigenous culture was significantly associated with lower co-endorsement. When examined simultaneously in one model, only parent education level remained significantly associated. Findings suggest a complex relationship between sociocultural factors and that attention to parent cultural affinity and parent education level may facilitate parent-therapist agreement on beliefs about child problem causes.Entities:
Keywords: Cultural competence; Explanatory etiologies; Parent–therapist agreement
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26420162 PMCID: PMC4811748 DOI: 10.1007/s10488-015-0684-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adm Policy Ment Health ISSN: 0894-587X