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From social liminality to cultural negotiation: Transformative processes in immigrant mental wellbeing. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper explores the psychosocial factors impacting immigrant mental wellbeing, focusing on how different cultural backgrounds influence perceptions of mental health.
  • Data collected from 21 focus groups with various ethnolinguistic groups in Ontario highlight two key concepts: 'social liminality' (the transitional stress immigrants experience) and 'cultural negotiation' (how they cope with cultural challenges).
  • Findings suggest that while these processes can be stressful, they also foster adaptation and promote new understandings of mental health, advocating for a holistic approach to mental health treatment that emphasizes collaboration with immigrant communities.

Article Abstract

The underlying psychosocial processes that produce immigrant mental wellbeing are understudied in anthropology and medicine. This paper provides insights into these processes by describing culturally diverse immigrants' perceptions of mental health and adaptation strategies. Qualitative data were collected from 21 focus groups as part of a large, multidisciplinary, participatory action research project about mental health with five ethnolinguistic groups (Mandarin-speaking Chinese, Polish, Punjabi Sikh, Somali and Spanish-speaking Latin American) in Ontario, Canada. In framing the analysis, transformative concepts are applied to address dimensions of power and culture - social liminality and cultural negotiation - to the ongoing psychosocial processes of coping with mental distress. 'Social liminality' describes how immigrants perceive themselves to be in a psychologically stressful, transitional state, whereas 'cultural negotiation' describes how they actively cope with cultural tensions and respond to mental health challenges. Study findings show that while social liminality and cultural negotiation are stressful, they also have the potential to help individuals adapt by producing a positive synthesis of ideas about mental health in new social and cultural contexts. The study contributes to the shift from problem identification using a biomedical model of mental illness to a more psychosocial and ecological approach that reveals the potential for resolving some mental health problems experienced in immigrant communities. Describing active psychosocial process of adaptation also reinforces the therapeutic and educational value of partnerships between practitioners and clients and immigrant communities and mental health systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13648470903249296DOI Listing

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