Concept Mapping the Ways to Support Mental Health and Mental Well-being of Canadian Racialized and Immigrant Communities.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Farah Ahmad, Lauren Culley, Navindra Baldeo, Khandker Ahmedul Haque, Alykhan Suleman
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Abstract

Although there is recent growing attention on mental health and mental well-being across the globe, supports in this area of healthcare can be a challenge for immigrant and racialized groups with experiences of hardship across several domains. This study aimed to gather perspectives from immigrants and racialized community members on strategies central to support their mental health and well-being, with the aim of addressing research to practice gaps. The study was co-designed in collaboration with a Community Action Table in Markham, Ontario, a setting with 93% of residents self-identifying as visible minorities. Using a community-focused mixed methods Concept Mapping approach, 68 residents, service providers, and policymakers were engaged through three phases of brainstorming, sorting and rating, and interpretation. Their brainstorming led to 68 statements which they sorted into groups and rated for importance and feasibility to act in next six months. Further analysis led to a 9-cluster concept map comprising of Family Wellness, Awareness & Education, Cultural Sensitivity, Social Service Access, Community Building, Socioeconomic, Food Security, Healthcare Access, and Housing Stability. These clusters are important in advancing knowledge on ways to support and prioritize mental health and well-being of immigrants and racialized communities. Overall, participants viewed mental health and well-being as being closely tied to their living and working conditions while also focusing on family wellness and intergenerational dynamics. Novel insights from this project are important for the planning of mental health and well-being supports for immigrant groups in Canada and can help improve foci across sectors through service implementation.

绘制支持加拿大种族化和移民社区心理健康和心理福祉的方法概念图。
尽管最近全球范围内对心理健康和心理幸福的关注与日俱增,但对于在多个领域都经历过困难的移民和种族化群体来说,在医疗保健领域提供支持可能是一项挑战。本研究旨在收集移民和种族化社区成员对支持其心理健康和幸福的核心策略的看法,以解决研究与实践之间的差距。这项研究是与安大略省万锦市的一个社区行动小组合作共同设计的,该社区有 93% 的居民自我认同为有色人种。采用以社区为重点的混合方法 "概念绘图法",68 名居民、服务提供者和政策制定者参与了集思广益、分类评级和解释三个阶段。通过集思广益,他们得出了 68 项陈述,并对这些陈述进行了分组,对其重要性和在未来六个月内采取行动的可行性进行了评级。通过进一步分析,形成了 9 个组群概念图,包括家庭健康、认识与教育、文化敏感性、社会服务获取、社区建设、社会经济、食品安全、医疗保健获取和住房稳定性。这些组群对于促进了解如何支持和优先考虑移民和种族化社区的心理健康和福祉非常重要。总体而言,参与者认为心理健康和幸福与他们的生活和工作条件密切相关,同时也关注家庭健康和代际动态。本项目的新见解对于加拿大移民群体心理健康和幸福支持的规划非常重要,有助于通过服务的实施改善各部门的工作重点。
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来源期刊
Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
104
期刊介绍: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health is an international forum for the publication of peer-reviewed original research pertaining to immigrant health from contributors in many diverse fields including public health, epidemiology, medicine and nursing, anthropology, sociology, population research, immigration law, and ethics. The journal also publishes review articles, short communications, letters to the editor, and notes from the field.
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