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Mental Health Attribution for Mexican-Origin Latinx and Non-Latinx Older Adults: A Latent Class Analysis

机译:墨西哥 - 原产地拉丁蛋白和非拉丁患者的心理健康归因:潜在课程分析

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Background and Objectives Providing appropriate and culturally sensitive care to the rapidly growing number of U.S. Latinx older adults with psychiatric conditions presents a major public health challenge. We know little about older Latinx adults’ perceived causes of mental health problems, offering clinicians limited insight to guide successful and culturally congruent treatment. Moreover, there is a paucity of mental health research examining heterogeneity in how Latinx individuals may attribute mental health symptoms. The present study sought to identify how Latinx and non-Latinx older adults attributed the sources of their mental health problems and how these types of attributions differ by ethnicity. Research Design and Methods This study analyzed data collected from a retrospective chart review and survey of 673 adults aged 55–95 years (430 Mexican origin and 244 non-Latinx) from a rural psychiatric outpatient clinic near the California–Mexico border. We conducted stratified latent class analysis (LCA) by race/ethnicity to explore the mental health attribution beliefs of Mexican-origin and non-Latinx clinic patients. Results Different LCA patterns for Mexican-origin Latinx versus non-Latinx groups were found. For non-Latinx adults, there was a class of individuals who attributed their mental health issues to social and financial problems. For Mexican-origin adults, there was a class of individuals who attributed their mental health issues to spiritual and/or supernatural factors, unaffected by acculturation level, depressive symptom severity, and time spent in the United States, but differing by gender. We found within-group heterogeneity: Not all Mexican-origin or non-Latinx older adults were alike in how they conceptualized their mental health. Discussion and Implications Mexican-origin Latinx and non-Latinx older adults attributed their mental health issues to different causes. More Mexican-origin older adults attributed their symptoms to spiritual causes, even after controlling for contextual factors. Further research is needed to determine whether attribution beliefs are affected by specific mental health diagnoses and other cultural factors not measured in this study.
机译:背景和目标为快速养殖的美国拉丁蛋白增长数量提供适当和文化敏感的护理,具有精神病条件的主要公共卫生挑战。我们对大型拉丁裔人的意识到的心理健康问题感知,提供了临床医生有限的洞察,以指导成功和文化的一致性治疗。此外,有缺乏精神健康研究检查拉丁裔人如何归因于心理健康症状的异质性。本研究试图确定拉丁克斯和非拉丁蛋达的老年人如何归因于他们的心理健康问题的来源以及这些类型的归因因种族而异。研究设计和方法本研究分析了从墨西哥边境附近的农村精神科门诊诊所进行了回顾性图表审查和673名成人(430岁墨西哥起源和244名非拉丁人)所收集的数据。我们通过种族/种族进行分层潜在课程分析(LCA),以探索墨西哥源和非拉丁诊所患者的心理健康归属信念。结果发现了墨西哥原产地拉丁语与非拉丁X组不同LCA模式。对于非拉丁裔人而言,有一类归因于社会和财务问题的心理健康问题。对于墨西哥来源的成年人,有一类归因于精神和/或超自然因素的心理健康问题,不受文产水平,抑郁症状严重程度和在美国所花费的时间,但性别不同。我们发现在集团内的异质性:并非所有墨西哥原产地或非拉丁蛋达较大的成年人都在概念化心理健康方面是相似的。讨论和含义墨西哥 - 原产地拉丁蛋白和非拉丁X老年人将他们的心理健康问题归因于不同的原因。更多墨西哥起源老年人归因于他们对精神原因的症状,即使在控制上下文因素之后也是如此。需要进一步研究以确定归因信避是否受到本研究中未衡量的特定心理健康诊断和其他文化因素的影响。

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