scholarly journals Trauma Exposure, Mental Disorder, and Risk of Suicide Ideation Among Aging U.S. Asians

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 51-51
Author(s):  
Ping Ma ◽  
Ruike Li ◽  
Yuki Shigemoto ◽  
Lei-Shih Chen

Abstract This project aims to explore the prevalence of traumatic experience and examine the association among trauma experience, lifetime mental disorder, and risk of endorsed suicide ideation among aging Asians. Data were drawn from the National Latino and Asian American Survey and participants aged 55 and above were included in the study. Descriptive analyses and weighted logistic regressions were employed to analyze the association among outcomes of interest. Approximately 74% of 376 aging Asians experienced trauma exposures. Specifically, 17% of respondents with trauma exposure reported a lifetime mental disorder, and 8% had suicide ideation. After adjusting for demographic, social support, and family factors, aging Asians with traumatic experience had a significantly higher risk of experiencing discrimination and mental disorders (p-values<.05). Assaultive or interpersonal violence exposure was positively associated with increased odds of suicide ideation. Culturally tailored mental health intervention and suicide screening are warranted for aging Asians with previous trauma exposure.

2021 ◽  
pp. 153270862110199
Author(s):  
Pengfei Zhao

This autoethnographic writing documents how a family of Chinese descent spent their first 100 hours after the Atlanta Shooting on March 16, 2021, in which a White gunman killed eight people, including six Asian women. It bears witness to the rise of the anti-Asian racism in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic and offers a snapshot of the private life of a family of Asian descent in the dawn of the Stop Asian Hate Movement. Drawing on Korean American poet Cathy Park Hong’s term minor feelings, this essay explores how emotions, rooted in racialized lived experience and triggered by the mass shooting, evolved, shifted, and fueled the sentiments that gave rise to the Stop Asian Hate Movement. Compared with the more visible violence against Asians and Asian Americans displayed on social media, it interrogates the less visible traumatic experience that haunts Asian and Asian American communities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 2156759X2110186
Author(s):  
Emily Sallee ◽  
Kok-Mun Ng ◽  
Abraham Cazares-Cervantes

Despite the growing epidemic of suicide ideation and attempt in adolescents, there is a lack of theory-based, empirical research to shed light on these issues in this population and inform school counselors’ preventive and responsive practices. We utilized Joiner’s Interpersonal Theory of Suicide (IPTS) to examine the extent to which the interpersonal constructs of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness predicted adolescent suicide ideation and attempt by conducting two binomial logistic regressions on archival data from the 2017 eighth-grade Oregon Healthy Teens Survey. Six of the seven selected proxy items were statistically significant in each logistic model, with slight variance between the two. Our findings suggest that the interpersonal constructs of the IPTS are applicable to early adolescents and may be used to inform suicide prevention and intervention efforts among this population in school settings.


Author(s):  
Ryan A. Robertson ◽  
M. Shae Nester ◽  
Christina M. Dardis

Although research into trauma and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is critical to informing evidence-based interventions, IRB committees express caution about the potential safety concerns these questions pose to participants. The present study examined the emotional consequences of participating in research asking questions about trauma and NSSI. A total of 544 participants completed self-report questionnaires assessing trauma exposure, NSSI, and reactions to research participation. Results indicated that trauma exposure was positively related with emotional reactions, and NSSI engagement was associated with higher incidences of trauma. Additionally, those with a history of NSSI reported greater emotional reactions and perceived drawbacks after participation. However, overall, individuals with a history of NSSI still indicated a positive research experience. Implications for how to safely conduct research with participants who have a history of NSSI and previous trauma exposure are discussed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynn A. Warner ◽  
Margarita Alegría ◽  
Glorisa Canino

Prevalence rates of childhood maltreatment among Hispanic women in the United States are presented separately for nativity status and ethnic origin subgroups, and the associations between different types of maltreatment and the development of anxiety and depressive disorders are examined. Analyses used self-report data from 1,427 Hispanic women who participated in the National Latino and Asian American Survey. Foreign-born Hispanic women compared to U.S.-born Hispanic women reported significantly lower rates of sexual assault and witnessing interpersonal violence, and a significantly higher rate of being beaten. Ethnic subgroups reported similar rates of maltreatment, with the exception of rape. Bivariate analyses were remarkably consistent in that regardless of nativity status or ethnic subgroup, each type of maltreatment experience increased the risk of psychiatric disorder. In multivariate models controlling for all types of victimization and proxies of acculturation, having been beaten and witnessing interpersonal violence remained significant predictors of both disorders, but sexual abuse increased risk of anxiety only. A significant interaction effect of family cultural conflict and witnessing violence on anxiety provided very limited support for the hypothesis that acculturation moderates the influence of maltreatment on mental health outcomes. Implications for culturally relevant prevention and intervention approaches are presented.


2010 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 742-754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin D. Freer ◽  
Adrienne Whitt-Woosley ◽  
Ginny Sprang

The current study examines trauma narratives from 28 survivors of interpersonal violence. A mixed-method approach assessed coherence and explored narrative characteristics among differentially exposed groups. The quantitative analysis revealed: (1) exposure to repetitive interpersonal violence was described with greater perception of severity and emotional tone than single interpersonal violence episodes, and (2) exposure to interpersonal violence in childhood was described with greater emotional tone than exposure to interpersonal violence in adulthood. The qualitative analysis revealed: (1) traumatic events were connected to proceeding adverse experiences, (2) attempted avoidance of memories of the violence, (3) an altered view of the self, and (4) lacked recognition that the violence was abnormal. The study supports the “dose-response relationship” of trauma exposure, and the life-altering, transformative nature of trauma exposure.


2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. S157-S157
Author(s):  
S. Dorrington ◽  
H. Zavos ◽  
H. Ball ◽  
P. McGuffin ◽  
A. Sumathipala ◽  
...  

IntroductionOnly a minority of trauma-exposed individuals go on to develop post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Previous studies in high-income countries suggest that maladaptive family functioning adversities (MFFA) in childhood may partially ex-plain individual variation in vulnerability to PTSD following trauma. We test in a lower middle income setting (Sri Lanka) whether: (1) MFFA moderates the association between exposure to trauma and later (a) PTSD (b) other psychiatric diagnoses; (2) any moderation by MFFA is explained by experiences of interpersonal violence, cumulative trauma exposure or other psychopathology.MethodsWe conducted a population study of 3995 twins and 2019 singletons residing in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Participants completed the composite international diagnostic interview, including nine traumatic exposures and a questionnaire on MFFA.ResultsIn total, 23.4% of participants reported exposure to MFFA. We found that (1) MFFA moderates the association between trauma exposure and both (a) PTSD and (b) non-PTSD diagnosis. (2) This was not explained by interpersonal violence, cumulative trauma exposure or other psychopathology.ConclusionsIn our sample MFFA moderates the association between trauma and PTSD, and the association between trauma and non-PTSD psychopathology.


Author(s):  
Carla Alves Pereira ◽  
Ana Teresa Pereira ◽  
Tânia Susana Amado Casanova ◽  
Alba Roca

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Snita Ahir-Knight

<p><b>Thesis abstract </b></p><p> </p><p>This dissertation is a contribution to the philosophy of mental disorder with a focus on children and youth and questions about what interventions they need. </p><p>I start by asking whether non-suicidal self-harm in youth is a mental disorder. Non-suicidal self-harm involves someone causing themselves harm with no intent to try to kill themselves. Young people cutting themselves alone and when with peers may be viewed as destructive, abnormal and irrational. Yet, I argue that non-suicidal self-harm in youth is never a mental disorder in its own right. Although non-suicidal self-harm in youth is not a disordered behaviour, that does not imply that it never merits intervention. </p><p>This leads to the question of what criteria should be applied when deciding whether to offer mental health interventions. I claim that whether one has a mental disorder should not determine whether one is offered a mental health intervention. The argument is made through considering the cases of non-suicidal self-harm in youth and unruly behaviour in children and youth. Unruly behaviour includes a wailing toddler, a child deliberately breaking items and a youth crossing police lines when protesting. </p><p>Unruly behaviour is another interesting case. In some instances, there is a high likelihood of negative outcomes for some children and youth who are behaving in an unruly way. However, unruly behaviour may also be part of a passing phase and helpful for development. Furthermore, in some cases, unruly behaviour may be praiseworthy, and encouraging unruliness may advance an individual’s welfare. The case of unruly behaviour, then, raises the question of when mental health clinicians should intervene. </p><p>The cases of non-suicidal self-harm and unruly behaviour help make my central claims. I say that behaviours and thoughts that are usually part of a passing phase and produce goods appropriate to that phase of life are not mental disorders; that managing life in the best way one can with the abilities available at a particular stage of life is not disordered; and, furthermore, that whether one has a mental disorder should not determine whether one is offered a mental health intervention. Finally, I say that, rather than depending on whether a person has a mental disorder, interventions should be offered only when they will advance the welfare of the service user. </p><p>My dissertation will appeal to philosophers. I also hope that youth, parents, teachers, clinicians, policy makers and similar will be interested in the contents. This is because important practical questions are asked that challenge common views, and that guide policies and clinical practice to improve the welfare and service outcomes for children and youth. </p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 273-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga G. Archambeau ◽  
B. Christopher Frueh ◽  
Aimee N. Deliramich ◽  
Jon D. Elhai ◽  
Anouk L. Grubaugh ◽  
...  

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