Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective

This qualitative research used the Long Interview method to study cultural and gender influences on mental health, health beliefs, health behaviour, help-seeking and treatment expectations for mental health problems in newcomers to Canada who are members of an ethnocultural, visible minority populat...

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Main Author: Pandalangat, Nalini
Other Authors: Seeman, Mary
Language:en_ca
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31890
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-318902013-04-17T04:19:17ZCultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender PerspectivePandalangat, NaliniMental HealthCultureGenderHelp-SeekingTreatmentSupportSri Lankan TamilVisible MinorityEthno-culturalNewcomerImmigrantRefugeeDepressionHealthService ProviderCommunity03470326This qualitative research used the Long Interview method to study cultural and gender influences on mental health, health beliefs, health behaviour, help-seeking and treatment expectations for mental health problems in newcomers to Canada who are members of an ethnocultural, visible minority population - the Sri Lankan Tamils. The study employed a comparative design and analyzed data from interviews with Tamil men (N=8) and Tamil women (N=8) who self-identified as having been diagnosed with depression, and service providers (N=8) who provide frontline mental health and related services to the Sri Lankan Tamil community. The objectives were to a) understand cultural and gender factors inherent in the Sri Lankan Tamil community; b) investigate how these cultural and gender factors impact mental health and influence the trajectory of help-seeking and treatment for depression in the Sri Lankan Tamil community; c) explore the intersection of culture and gender as it relates to health behaviour; and d) explore service providers’ perceptions of the influence of culture and gender in relation to help-seeking for mental health problems and the application of this understanding to service delivery. The study found that the respondents equated social function with health and that this concept informed help-seeking and treatment expectations. Socially appropriate functioning was seen as an indicator of health, and this differed by gender. Gender-differentiated social stressors contributed to depression. Women played a role as enablers of care, both for family members and acquaintances. Men were more resistant to help-seeking and tended to disengage from care. There was a distinct preference for service providers who understood the culture and spoke Tamil. Religious groups served a social support function. Family physicians and Tamil service providers in the social service sectors were identified as key players in the pathways to care. Service providers did not appear to understand the community’s holistic view of health; however, they did use their knowledge of the community to make adaptations to practice. Recommendations that result from these findings include health promotion and prevention strategies beyond the traditional health care system, targeted culture and gender-informed interventions, and the need for multisectoral collaborations.Seeman, Mary2011-112012-01-11T17:18:05ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-01-11T17:18:05Z2012-01-11Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/31890en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Mental Health
Culture
Gender
Help-Seeking
Treatment
Support
Sri Lankan Tamil
Visible Minority
Ethno-cultural
Newcomer
Immigrant
Refugee
Depression
Health
Service Provider
Community
0347
0326
spellingShingle Mental Health
Culture
Gender
Help-Seeking
Treatment
Support
Sri Lankan Tamil
Visible Minority
Ethno-cultural
Newcomer
Immigrant
Refugee
Depression
Health
Service Provider
Community
0347
0326
Pandalangat, Nalini
Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective
description This qualitative research used the Long Interview method to study cultural and gender influences on mental health, health beliefs, health behaviour, help-seeking and treatment expectations for mental health problems in newcomers to Canada who are members of an ethnocultural, visible minority population - the Sri Lankan Tamils. The study employed a comparative design and analyzed data from interviews with Tamil men (N=8) and Tamil women (N=8) who self-identified as having been diagnosed with depression, and service providers (N=8) who provide frontline mental health and related services to the Sri Lankan Tamil community. The objectives were to a) understand cultural and gender factors inherent in the Sri Lankan Tamil community; b) investigate how these cultural and gender factors impact mental health and influence the trajectory of help-seeking and treatment for depression in the Sri Lankan Tamil community; c) explore the intersection of culture and gender as it relates to health behaviour; and d) explore service providers’ perceptions of the influence of culture and gender in relation to help-seeking for mental health problems and the application of this understanding to service delivery. The study found that the respondents equated social function with health and that this concept informed help-seeking and treatment expectations. Socially appropriate functioning was seen as an indicator of health, and this differed by gender. Gender-differentiated social stressors contributed to depression. Women played a role as enablers of care, both for family members and acquaintances. Men were more resistant to help-seeking and tended to disengage from care. There was a distinct preference for service providers who understood the culture and spoke Tamil. Religious groups served a social support function. Family physicians and Tamil service providers in the social service sectors were identified as key players in the pathways to care. Service providers did not appear to understand the community’s holistic view of health; however, they did use their knowledge of the community to make adaptations to practice. Recommendations that result from these findings include health promotion and prevention strategies beyond the traditional health care system, targeted culture and gender-informed interventions, and the need for multisectoral collaborations.
author2 Seeman, Mary
author_facet Seeman, Mary
Pandalangat, Nalini
author Pandalangat, Nalini
author_sort Pandalangat, Nalini
title Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective
title_short Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective
title_full Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective
title_fullStr Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Cultural Influences on Help-seeking, Treatment and Support for Mental Health Problems - A Comparative Study using a Gender Perspective
title_sort cultural influences on help-seeking, treatment and support for mental health problems - a comparative study using a gender perspective
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31890
work_keys_str_mv AT pandalangatnalini culturalinfluencesonhelpseekingtreatmentandsupportformentalhealthproblemsacomparativestudyusingagenderperspective
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