Issues in Mental Health Nursing
Volume 18, Issue 3, 1997, Pages 173-189

Mental health beliefs, practices, and knowledge of Chinese American immigrant women (Article)

Tabora B.L.* , Flaskerud J.H.
  • a Department of Nursing, California State University, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 2379 Nalin Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90077, United States
  • b School of Nursing, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, United States

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to describe the mental health beliefs and practices of Chinese American immigrant women. A two-part design using both qualitative and quantitative techniques was employed. The first step utilized focus group (n = 14) and key informant (n = 2) interviews to discover the beliefs, practices, and knowledge about mental health of this population. Content analysis was used to examine and condense the qualitative data. After completion of the qualitative component, 72 women were recruited to complete a set of questionnaires, which included a demographic questionnaire, culture and work subscale, and the mental health portion of the Health Behavior Scale of the Survey of Chinese American Mental Health (NRCAAMH, 1993). Pearson product-moment correlations and regression analysis were used to analyze the quantitative data. Content analysis found that the cultural value placed on the avoidance of shame, pragmatism that results in the use of both Western and traditional Chinese practitioners and treatments, and the inadequacy of Western-type services to meet the needs of the Chinese American immigrant population act as barriers to utilization of these services. These results are cross-validated by the quantitative findings. The importance of culture in determining the pathway to care was supported by the finding that higher levels of acculturation are related to greater use of mental health services.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

statistical analysis China mental health service psychological aspect methodology Data Interpretation, Statistical Sampling Studies mental health human epidemiology middle aged Aged Mental Health Services ethnology Humans Asian Americans Asian American Medicine, Chinese Traditional Acculturation female Chinese medicine questionnaire cultural factor Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Article Questionnaires adult migration Utilization Review Emigration and Immigration Cultural Characteristics nursing research attitude to health

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0031136136&doi=10.3109%2f01612849709012488&partnerID=40&md5=f48b9ff4b6f8c1d8142a906f4403e7ac

DOI: 10.3109/01612849709012488
ISSN: 01612840
Cited by: 69
Original Language: English