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Reported immigration and medical coercion among immigrants referred to a cultural consultation service.

Authors: Tran DQRyder AGJarvis GE


Affiliations

1 McGill University.
2 Concordia University.

Description

Reported immigration and medical coercion among immigrants referred to a cultural consultation service.



Transcult Psychiatry. 2019 Jun 06;:1363461519847811



Authors: Tran DQ, Ryder AG, Jarvis GE



Abstract

Members of visible minorities are commonly targets of social coercion related to immigration and medical measures. Social coercion is associated with poor mental health outcomes and mistrust of medical services. This study will determine if Afro-Canadian immigrants referred to a Cultural Consultation Service (CCS) in Montreal report more or less medical and immigration coercion compared with other ethnic minorities. We reviewed the charts of 729 referrals to the CCS and gathered data on the 401 patients included in the study. Chi-square statistics examined the relation between minority group and self-reported coercion. Binary logistic regression models controlled for standard sociodemographic variables in addition to ethnicity, language barrier, length of stay in Canada since immigration, refugee claimant status, referral source, presence of psychosis in the main diagnosis, and presence of legal history. Patients were diverse and included 105 Afro-Canadians, 40 Latin Americans, 73 Arab and West Asians, 149 South Asians, and 34 East and Southeast Asians. Being Afro-Canadian was significantly and positively associated with medical coercion (p?=?.02, 95% CI?=?1.15-4.57), while being South Asian was negatively and significantly associated with immigration coercion (p?=?.03, 95% CI?=?.29-.93). Members of visible minority communities are not equal in their reported experience of social coercion after arriving to Canada. Future research clarifying pathways to mental health care for immigrants and the experience of new Canadians in immigration and health care settings would give needed context to the findings of this study.



PMID: 31170894 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Links

PubMed: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31170894?dopt=Abstract