Hospital and Community Psychiatry
Volume 33, Issue 4, 1982, Pages 299-303

Culturally syntonic family therapy for migrant Puerto Ricans (Article)

Canino G. , Canino I.A.
  • a Sch. Publ. Hlth, Univ. Puerto Rico, Rio-Piedras, Puerto Rico
  • b Sch. Publ. Hlth, Univ. Puerto Rico, Rio-Piedras, Puerto Rico

Abstract

Puerto Ricans and other Hispanics have traditionally used the nuclear and extended family as vital support systems to deal with stress. Some Puerto Rican migrant families living in the United States have been suspected of being at high risk for mental health problems precisely because they lack extended family supports. Working together as bilingual co-therapists, the authors found that a systems-oriented family therapy approach is effective and syntonic with the culture of Hispanic migrants. They provide a clinical vignette and warn therapists about the potential problems in differentiating dysfunctional family patterns from culturally sanctioned behaviors.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

cultural anthropology central nervous system Puerto Rico Family Therapy human Adaptation, Psychological Depressive Disorder Hispanic Americans United States family Adolescent case report female Community Mental Health Services therapy Social Environment migration ethnic or racial aspects Psychotherapy, Multiple Transients and Migrants Culture

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0020079925&partnerID=40&md5=5dfbb11b27ca8ffd8d27af5193f96f0c

ISSN: 00221597
Cited by: 30
Original Language: English