| Literature DB >> 33033998 |
Christopher P Salas-Wright1,2, Michael G Vaughn3,4, Trenette Clark Goings5, Cory L Cobb6, Mariana Cohen7, Pablo Montero-Zamora8, Rob Eschmann7, Rachel John7, Patricia Andrade9, Kesia Oliveros9, José Rodríguez10, Milded M Maldonado-Molina11, Seth J Schwartz8,6.
Abstract
We identify subtypes of Venezuelan youth based on patterns of technology-based communication with friends in their receiving (US) and sending (Venezuela) countries and, in turn, examine the behavioral health characteristics among different "subtypes" of youth. Using data from 402 recently-arrived Venezuelan immigrant youth (ages 10-17), latent profile analysis and multinomial regression are employed to examine the relationships between technology-based communication and key outcomes. We identified a four-class solution: [#1] "Daily Contact in US, In Touch with Venezuela" (32%), [#2] "Daily Communication in Both Countries" (19%), [#3] "Weekly Contact: More Voice/Text Than Social Media" (35%), and [#4] "Infrequent Communication with US and Venezuela" (14%). Compared to Class #1, youth in Classes #2 and #3 report elevated depressive symptomatology and more permissive substance use views. Findings suggest that how youth navigate and maintain transnational connections varies substantially, and that technology-based communication is related to key post-migration outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Depression; Immigrants; Smartphones; Venezuela
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33033998 PMCID: PMC8026776 DOI: 10.1007/s10903-020-01099-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immigr Minor Health ISSN: 1557-1912