Abstract
Identifying factors that facilitate treatment for psychotic disorders among Chinese-immigrants is crucial due to delayed treatment
use. Identifying causal beliefs held by relatives that might predict identification of ‘mental illness’ as opposed to other
‘indigenous labels’ may promote more effective mental health service use. We examine what effects beliefs of ‘physical causes’
and other non-biomedical causal beliefs (‘general social causes’, and ‘indigenous Chinese beliefs’ or culture-specific epistemologies
of illness) might have on mental illness identification. Forty-nine relatives of Chinese-immigrant consumers with psychosis
were sampled. Higher endorsement of ‘physical causes’ was associated with mental illness labeling. However among the non-biomedical
causal beliefs, ‘general social causes’ demonstrated no relationship with mental illness identification, while endorsement
of ‘indigenous Chinese beliefs’ showed a negative relationship. Effective treatment- and community-based psychoeducation,
in addition to emphasizing biomedical models, might integrate indigenous Chinese epistemologies of illness to facilitate rapid
identification of psychotic disorders and promote treatment use.
use. Identifying causal beliefs held by relatives that might predict identification of ‘mental illness’ as opposed to other
‘indigenous labels’ may promote more effective mental health service use. We examine what effects beliefs of ‘physical causes’
and other non-biomedical causal beliefs (‘general social causes’, and ‘indigenous Chinese beliefs’ or culture-specific epistemologies
of illness) might have on mental illness identification. Forty-nine relatives of Chinese-immigrant consumers with psychosis
were sampled. Higher endorsement of ‘physical causes’ was associated with mental illness labeling. However among the non-biomedical
causal beliefs, ‘general social causes’ demonstrated no relationship with mental illness identification, while endorsement
of ‘indigenous Chinese beliefs’ showed a negative relationship. Effective treatment- and community-based psychoeducation,
in addition to emphasizing biomedical models, might integrate indigenous Chinese epistemologies of illness to facilitate rapid
identification of psychotic disorders and promote treatment use.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Brief Report
- Pages 1-6
- DOI 10.1007/s10597-011-9464-z
- Authors
- Lawrence H. Yang, Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street, Room 1610, New York, NY 10032, USA
- Ahtoy J. Wonpat-Borja, Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street, Room 1610, New York, NY 10032, USA
- Journal Community Mental Health Journal
- Online ISSN 1573-2789
- Print ISSN 0010-3853