Racial discrimination and racism are ubiquitous. These feelings and resulting acts of discrimination contribute to the mental illnesses among those who experience it and face it regularly. Although efforts have been made at international level to develop correct definitions and actions to mitigate and eliminate these acts in policies, reality remains very different.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe stress of migration as well as social factors and changes related to the receiving society may lead to the manifestation of psychiatric disorders in vulnerable individuals after migration. The diversity of cultures, ethnicities, races and reasons for migration poses a challenge for those seeking to understand how illness is experienced by immigrants whose backgrounds differ significantly from their clinicians. Cultural competence represents good clinical practice and can be defined as such that a clinician regards each patient in the context of the patient's own culture as well as from the perspective of the clinician's cultural values and prejudices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscult Psychiatry
December 2013
This article discusses major themes in recent transcultural psychiatric research in the Nordic countries from 2008 to 2011: (a) epidemiological studies of migration, (b) indigenous populations, and (c) quality of psychiatric care for migrants. Over the past several decades, the populations of the Nordic countries, Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, which were relatively homogeneous, have become increasingly culturally diverse. Many migrants to Nordic countries have been exposed to extreme stress, such as threats of death and/or torture and other severe social adversities before, during, and after migration, with potential effects on their physical, mental, social, and spiritual health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscult Psychiatry
April 2011
The three issues of gender equality, human rights and cultural diversity have dominated my organizational commitments, research, and clinical practice in transcultural psychiatry. These issues are intertwined in many ways and have broad implications for transcultural psychiatry. With increasing globalization, psychiatrists in many countries are likely to be treating patients who have migrated from different cultures and who may have been exposed to a variety of traumatic experiences that have a profound impact on their mental health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: It is difficult to evaluate gender differences in relation to health because occupation and position are different for males and females. It is therefore necessary to evaluate how health is affected for both genders with the same working conditions. The purpose of this study was to evaluate: 1) gender differences in relation to different stressors within daily life, working life and health, 2) how these stressors affect the correlation between stress and gender.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is increasing focus on the gender perspective related to the consequences of collective violence. Women run a greater risk of being victims of sexual violence, but few studies have focused on gender differences with respect to physical violence, sexual violations and the impact on health. Further research is needed on these issues as well as on the identification of evidence based interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMental disorders contribute significantly to the Global Burden of Disease, as four out of the ten diseases with the highest burden are psychiatric. About 25% of all develop one or more psychiatric and behavioural disorders during their lifetime. Unipolar depression ranges as the leading mental disorder with respect to disability adjusted life years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUgeskr Laeger
September 2006
There is increasing focus on the gender perspective related to the consequences of collective violence. Women run a greater risk of being victims of sexual violence, but few studies have focused on gender differences with respect to physical violence, sexual violations and the impact on health. Further research is needed on these issues as well as research on the identification of evidence based interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMental disorders contribute significantly to the Global Burden of Disease. Four out of the ten diseases with the highest burden are psychiatric. About 25% of all individuals develop one or more psychiatric and behavioural disorders during their lifetime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn increasing number of patients in contact with the Danish health services have a non-Danish background. What are the ethical questions and dilemmas doctors face with this patient population in relation to their participation in medical research? This paper discusses the core medical ethical principles, including autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice in relation to the participation in research of members of various ethnic groups.
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