Sophia B. Lau, Duckhyun Jo, Lisa Nakamura, Samuel D. Spencer, Akihiko Masuda
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the present study, we investigated whether the internalized model minority myth was associated with a range of mental health-related attitudes in a sample of Asian American college students in Hawaiʻi. Participants were 391 Asian American college students recruited from psychology courses at a 4-year public university in Hawaiʻi. As part of their course activities, they voluntarily completed an online survey package that included the measures of interest. The achievement facet of the internalized model minority myth was positively and uniquely associated with the exclusion and course/origin facets of mental health stigma (i.e., stigmatizing attitudes toward people with a psychological disorder). The unrestricted mobility facet of the internalized model minority myth was positively and uniquely associated with the course/origin facet of mental health stigma. Neither facet of the internalized model minority myth was associated with mental health help-seeking attitudes. Implications of these findings and future directions in research are discussed.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling is published under the auspices of the International Association for Counselling. It promotes the exchange of information about counselling activities throughout the world. The Editorial Board is committed to working with diverse authors from varied backgrounds to meet the publication standards for the International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling, including assistance with organization, structure, and style for publication. The journal publishes conceptual, practical, and research contributions that provide an international perspective on the following areas:
Theories and models of guidance and counselling;
Counsellor education and supervision;
State of the art reports on guidance and counselling in specific settings;
Social justice and equity (e.g., issues of diversity, advocacy, racial or ethnic identity, religion and culture, gender issues);
Special applications;
Counselling services in countries with social and economic challenges.