Culturally Anchored Mental-Health Attitudes: The Impact of Language

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Clinical Psychological Science Pub Date : 2023-03-04 DOI:10.1177/21677026221148110
Uriel C. Heller, L. H. Grant, Miwa Yasui, B. Keysar
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Abstract

Culture plays a key role in the long-standing underutilization of professional mental-health services among immigrants and ethnic minorities, especially among Asian communities. Furthermore, language nativeness can modulate the salience of cultural norms. Through a series of four experimental studies ( N = 1,120), we evaluated whether bilingual speakers’ attitudes toward mental-health treatment are affected by whether they are using their native Chinese or foreign English. Overall, participants more strongly endorsed mental-health treatment when information was presented in English. The same outcome was found for participants residing in the United States and mainland China. Consistent with a language-priming-culture hypothesis, participants using Chinese endorsed mental-health treatment less when their affiliation with traditional Asian values was higher, whereas in English their recommendations remained independent of affiliation with traditional Asian values. In sum, these studies reveal the significance of language in culturally anchored mental-health attitudes.
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文化锚定的心理健康态度:语言的影响
文化在移民和少数民族,特别是亚裔社区长期缺乏专业心理健康服务方面起着关键作用。此外,语言的原生性可以调节文化规范的显著性。通过四项实验研究(N = 1120),我们评估了双语使用者对心理健康治疗的态度是否受到他们使用母语汉语或外语英语的影响。总的来说,当用英语提供信息时,参与者更强烈地支持心理健康治疗。居住在美国和中国大陆的参与者也发现了同样的结果。与语言-启动-文化假设一致,使用中文的参与者在与传统亚洲价值观的联系较高时较少支持心理健康治疗,而使用英语的参与者的建议与与传统亚洲价值观的联系无关。总之,这些研究揭示了语言在文化锚定的心理健康态度中的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Clinical Psychological Science
Clinical Psychological Science Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
2.10%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The Association for Psychological Science’s journal, Clinical Psychological Science, emerges from this confluence to provide readers with the best, most innovative research in clinical psychological science, giving researchers of all stripes a home for their work and a place in which to communicate with a broad audience of both clinical and other scientists.
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