Community Mental Health Journal
Volume 38, Issue 3, 2002, Pages 223-237

Cognitive, affective, and physiological expressions of anxiety symptomatology among Mexican migrant farmworkers: Predictors and generational differences (Article)

Hovey J.D.* , Magaña C.G.
  • a Prog. Stud. Immigration Mental Hlth., Department of Psychology, University of Toledo, United States, Prog. Stud. Immigration Mental Hlth., Department of Psychology, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH 43606, United States
  • b Prog. Stud. Immigration Mental Hlth., Department of Psychology, University of Toledo, United States

Abstract

Scant research has examined the mental health of migrant farmworkers in the United States. The purposes of the present study were threefold: to assess the prevalence levels of anxiety symptoms in a sample of Mexican migrant farmworkers in the Midwest United States; to examine the relationship between acculturative stress and anxiety; and to determine the variables that significantly predict anxiety. High levels were found for overall anxiety and in the cognitive, affective, and physiological expressions of anxiety. Elevated acculturative stress, low self esteem, ineffective social support, lack of control and choice in the decision to live a migrant farmworker lifestyle, low religiosity, and high education were significantly related to high anxiety levels. The overall findings suggest that Mexican migrant farmworkers who experience high acculturative stress may be at risk for developing anxiety-related disorders. The findings highlight the necessity of establishing prevention and treatment services for migrant farmworkers that increase levels of emotional support, self esteem, and coping skills.

Author Keywords

Social support Migrant farmworker Acculturative stress Anxiety prevention

Index Keywords

anxiety education symptomatology lifestyle psychological aspect Midwestern United States agricultural worker human Stress, Psychological Agriculture mental stress coping behavior affect social support self esteem ethnology religion United States migrant worker Humans Hispanic Adolescent male Acculturation cognition prediction female Multivariate Analysis stress questionnaire self concept cultural factor prevalence Article manpower adult migration Observer Variation Transients and Migrants pathophysiology Mexican Americans

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0036595731&doi=10.1023%2fA%3a1015215723786&partnerID=40&md5=e74ae0496e339efae5603567a9587b80

DOI: 10.1023/A:1015215723786
ISSN: 00103853
Cited by: 43
Original Language: English