Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Ryder AG" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Neurodiversity, Minority Status, and Mental Health: A Quantitative Study on the Experiences of Culturally Diverse University Students in Canada Bayeh R; Ryder AG; 40933676
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Thinking Outside the Nation: Cognitive Flexibility s Role in National Identity Inclusiveness as a Marker of Majority Group Acculturation Medvetskaya A; Ryder AG; Doucerain MM; 40282118
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Developmental exposure to the physical and social world and responses to risk among college students from four cultural contexts Chentsova-Dutton Y; Gürcan-Yildirim D; Wu J; Zakharov I; Ryder AG; 40147255
CONCORDIA
4 Culture and personality disorder: from a fragmented literature to a contextually grounded alternative Ryder AG; Sunohara M; Kirmayer LJ; 25415498
CCRH
5 The Chinese Experience of Rapid Modernization: Sociocultural Changes, Psychological Consequences? Sun J; Ryder AG; 27092093
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Toward a Culturally Responsive Model of Mental Health Literacy: Facilitating Help-Seeking Among East Asian Immigrants to North America Na S; Ryder AG; Kirmayer LJ; 27596560
PSYCHOLOGY
7 What Comes First, Acculturation or Adjustment? A Longitudinal Investigation of Integration Versus Mental Resources Hypotheses Doucerain MM; Amiot CE; Jurcik T; Ryder AG; 38031873
CONCORDIA
8 Martin Buber: guide for a psychology of suffering Tweed RG; Bergen TP; Castaneto KK; Ryder AG; 37251029
PSYCHOLOGY
9 The Social Lives of Infectious Diseases: Why Culture Matters to COVID-19 Bayeh R; Yampolsky MA; Ryder AG; 34630195
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Ethnoracial Differences in Coercive Referral and Intervention Among Patients With First-Episode Psychosis Knight S; Jarvis GE; Ryder AG; Lashley M; Rousseau C; 34253035
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Glycemic extremes are related to cognitive dysfunction in children with type 1 diabetes: A meta-analysis He J; Ryder AG; Li S; Liu W; Zhu X; 29573221
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Reported immigration and medical coercion among immigrants referred to a cultural consultation service. Tran DQ, Ryder AG, Jarvis GE 31170894
CONCORDIA
13 Acculturation and adjustment of migrants reporting trauma: The contextual effects of perceived ethnic density. Jurcik T, Sunohara M, Yakobov E, Solopieiva-Jurcikova I, Ahmed R, Ryder AG 30981217
PSYCHOLOGY
14 Explaining mental health disparities for non-monosexual women: abuse history and risky sex, or the burdens of non-disclosure? Persson TJ; Pfaus JG; Ryder AG; 25223831
PSYCHOLOGY
15 Reply to: Are stressful childhood experiences relevant in non-monosexual women? Persson TJ; Pfaus JG; Ryder AG; 25459207
PSYCHOLOGY
16 Comparing Subjective Ratings of Sexual Arousal and Desire in Partnered Sexual Activities from Women of Different Sexual Orientations Persson TJ; Ryder AG; Pfaus JG; 25808718
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:The Social Lives of Infectious Diseases: Why Culture Matters to COVID-19
Authors:Bayeh RYampolsky MARyder AG
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34630195/
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2021.648086
Publication:Frontiers in psychology
Keywords:COVID-19cultural psychologycultural-clinical psychologydiscriminationinfectious diseasepandemicracism
PMID:34630195 Category: Date Added:2021-10-11
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Culture, Health, and Personality Lab and Centre for Clinical Research in Health, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 School of Psychology, Université Laval, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 Culture and Mental Health Research Unit and Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Over the course of the year 2020, the global scientific community dedicated considerable effort to understanding COVID-19. In this review, we discuss some of the findings accumulated between the onset of the pandemic and the end of 2020, and argue that although COVID-19 is clearly a biological disease tied to a specific virus, the culture-mind relation at the heart of cultural psychology is nonetheless essential to understanding the pandemic. Striking differences have been observed in terms of relative mortality, transmission rates, behavioral responses, official policies, compliance with authorities, and even the extent to which beliefs about COVID-19 have been politicized across different societies and groups. Moreover, many minority groups have very different experiences of the pandemic relative to dominant groups, notably through existing health inequities as well as discrimination and marginalization, which we believe calls for a better integration of political and socioeconomic factors into cultural psychology and into the narrative of health and illness in psychological science more broadly. Finally, individual differences in, for example, intolerance of uncertainty, optimism, conspiratorial thinking, or collectivist orientation are influenced by cultural context, with implications for behaviors that are relevant to the spread and impact of COVID-19, such as mask-wearing and social distancing. The interplay between cultural context and the experience and expression of mental disorders continues to be documented by cultural-clinical psychology; the current work extends this thinking to infectious disease, with special attention to diseases spread by social contact and fought at least in part through social interventions. We will discuss cultural influences on the transmission, course, and outcome of COVID-19 at three levels: (1) cross-society differences; (2) within-society communities and intergroup relations; and (3) individual differences shaped by cultural context. We conclude by considering potential theoretical implications of this perspective on infectious disease for cultural psychology and related disciplines, as well as practical implications of this perspective on science communication and public health interventions.





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