移民的压力-支持模式与心理困扰

M. Ritsner, I. Modai, A. Ponizovsky
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引用次数: 55

摘要

研究了不同压力源和社会支持来源对移民心理困扰的影响。主要变量采用感知移民相关压力源量表、感知社会支持多维量表和Talbieh简短痛苦量表进行测量。数据是从最近从前苏联移民到以色列的565名成年人的社区样本中收集的。移民报告的最重要的压力源是物质相关的,其次是文化、信息和健康相关的压力源。那些认为社会支持很容易获得的人比那些认为社会支持不会到来的人有更低的痛苦评级。研究对象表示,来自家庭和重要他人的社会支持明显高于来自朋友的支持。社会资源(尤其是来自朋友的支持)在低压力条件下阻止了痛苦,但在压力增加时失去了阻止作用。多重回归分析表明,压力源和社会支持资源的各种组合解释了低压力条件下50%的心理困扰差异,以及压力强度增加时27%的差异。综上所述,本研究表明:(1)社会压力因素影响心理困扰及其症状;(2)社会支持资源介导应激源对心理困扰的影响;(3)心理困扰的变异性根源于不同的压力-支持模式。版权所有©2000约翰威利父子有限公司
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The stress‐support patterns and psychological distress of immigrants
The effects of various stressors and sources of social support on the psychological distress of immigrants were examined. Key variables were measured using the Perceived Immigration Related Stressors Scale, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support and the Talbieh Brief Distress Inventory. Data were collected from a community-based sample of 565 adult individuals who recently emigrated from the former Soviet Union to Israel. The most significant stressors reported by immigrants were material-related, followed by culture-, information-, and health-related stressors. Those who perceived that social support was readily available had lower distress ratings than others who believed that social support was not forthcoming. Subjects reported significantly greater social support from family and significant others, than from friends. Social resources (especially support from friends) deterred distress under low stress conditions, but lost the deterring effect as stressors increased. Multiple regression analyses indicated that various combinations of stressors and social support resources explained 50 per cent of the variance in psychological distress under low stress conditions and 27 per cent of the variance as stress intensity increased. In conclusion, the study demonstrates that (1) social-stress factors affect psychological distress and symptoms, (2) social support resources mediate the effects of stressors on psychological distress, and (3) variability in psychological distress is rooted in differential stress-support patterns. Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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