| Literature DB >> 27127454 |
Lawrence Yang1, Graciete Lo2, Ming Tu3, Olivia Wu4, Deidre Anglin5, Anne Saw6, Fang-Pei Chen7.
Abstract
Encounters with Western psychiatric treatment and acculturation may influence causal beliefs of psychiatric illness endorsed by Chinese immigrant relatives, thus affecting help-seeking. We examined causal beliefs held by forty-six Chinese immigrant relatives and found that greater acculturation was associated with an increased number of causal beliefs. Further, as Western psychiatric treatment and acculturation increased, causal models expanded to incorporate biological/physical causes. However, frequency of Chinese immigrant relatives' endorsing spiritual beliefs did not appear to change with acculturation. Clinicians might thus account for spiritual beliefs in treatment even after acculturation increases and biological causal models proliferate.Entities:
Keywords: Acculturation; Causal Beliefs; Chinese; Culture; Family; Immigrant; Schizophrenia; Treatment Contact
Year: 2015 PMID: 27127454 PMCID: PMC4846303 DOI: 10.1080/15562948.2013.856509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immigr Refug Stud ISSN: 1556-2948