scholarly journals Creating a Culture of Mental Health in Filipino Immigrant Communities through Community Partnerships

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aviril Sepulveda ◽  
Dean M. Coffey ◽  
Jed David ◽  
Horacio Lopez ◽  
Kamil Bantol ◽  
...  

One out of five children in the United States has a mental, emotional, or behavioral health diagnosis. Behavioral health issues cost America $247 billion per year and those with mental health disorders have poorer health and shorter lives. Evidence-based parenting interventions provided in childhood have proven to be effective in helping parents to prevent disruptive, oppositional and defiant behaviors, anxiety and depressive symptoms, tobacco, alcohol, and drug misuse, aggression, delinquency, and violence. Yet, few parents participate in such programs, especially hard-to-reach, underserved minority and immigrant populations. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has identified a culture of health action framework that mobilizes individuals, communities, and organizations in order to examine ways to improve systems of prevention, invest in building the evidence base for such systems, and provide evidence-based information to decision makers. The overarching goal of this effort was to create a culture of mental health among Filipinos, a large, yet understudied immigrant community that is affected by alarming mental health disparities, including high rates of adolescent suicide ideation and attempts. Our impact project focused on increasing the reach of the Incredible Years® because maximizing the participation of high-risk, hard-to-engage populations may be one of the most important ways to increase the population-level impact of evidence-based parenting programs. If the approach succeeded with Filipinos, comparable strategies could be used to effectively reach other underserved populations in the U.S., many of whom are reluctant to seek behavioral health services. In this chapter we discuss 1) the state of the literature on the topic of Filipino adolescent mental health disparities; 2) our wicked problem and the impact project aimed at ameliorating this issue; 3) how our team formed and implemented our impact project; 4) outcomes and results of our efforts; 5) challenges we faced and how they were overcome; 6) the leadership and health equity skills that were most helpful in addressing our problem; and 7) a toolkit that could assist other communities addressing youth mental health and prevention of suicide and depression.

2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana J. Bridges ◽  
Arthur R. Andrews ◽  
Bianca T. Villalobos ◽  
Freddie A. Pastrana ◽  
Timothy A. Cavell ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Martin Plöderl ◽  
Lieselotte Mahler ◽  
Timo O. Nieder ◽  
Götz Mundle

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) individuals face specific mental health challenges, as will be described in this chapter. Many studies reported elevated mental health problems for LGB individuals compared with their heterosexual counterparts. Fewer studies are available for trans(-gender) and inter(-sex) individuals, but the majority reported increased levels of mental health problems compared with their cisgendered or non-inter counterparts. Current explanatory models centre on the pathogenic effect of homonegativity, transnegativity, and internegativity, as well as the underlying rigid gender roles, resulting in minority stressors that LGBTI individuals and those who are perceived as LGBTI are faced with. Such experienced or internalized minority stress can explain mental health disparities well. This contrasts with the long-standing medical view that LGBTI conditions are inherently pathological. Evidence-based LGBTI-specific prevention and intervention programmes are emerging.


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