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Acculturation and adjustment of migrants reporting trauma: The contextual effects of perceived ethnic density.

Author(s): Jurcik T, Sunohara M, Yakobov E, Solopieiva-Jurcikova I, Ahmed R, Ryder AG

J Community Psychol. 2019 Apr 13;: Authors: Jurcik T, Sunohara M, Yakobov E, Solopieiva-Jurcikova I, Ahmed R, Ryder AG

Article GUID: 30981217


Title:Acculturation and adjustment of migrants reporting trauma: The contextual effects of perceived ethnic density.
Authors:Jurcik TSunohara MYakobov ESolopieiva-Jurcikova IAhmed RRyder AG
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30981217?dopt=Abstract
Category:J Community Psychol
PMID:30981217
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, National Research University-Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia.
2 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
3 Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
4 School of Social Work, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
5 Sir Mortimer B. Davis Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Canada.

Description:

Acculturation and adjustment of migrants reporting trauma: The contextual effects of perceived ethnic density.

J Community Psychol. 2019 Apr 13;:

Authors: Jurcik T, Sunohara M, Yakobov E, Solopieiva-Jurcikova I, Ahmed R, Ryder AG

Abstract

Little is known about the relation between acculturation and socioecological contexts of migrants with a personal trauma history living in the community. This study represents an extension of our previous work and aimed to unpack the perceived neighborhood ethnic density (ED) effect and examine the moderating role of ED on the acculturation-adjustment relation in a community sample of migrants with trauma (N?=?99) from developing countries residing in Montreal, Canada. ED was protective against general psychological distress but did not predict posttraumatic symptoms. The ED effect was mediated via degree of acculturation to the French-Canadian mainstream cultural context, rather than heritage acculturation, social support, or discrimination. Moreover, protective effects of French-Canadian mainstream acculturation for depressive symptoms and life satisfaction were found under high but not low ED conditions. Similarities and differences with our previous research as well as theoretical and prevention implications are discussed from a person-environment interaction perspective.

PMID: 30981217 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]