Acculturation, Familism and Mother–Daughter Relations Among Suicidal and Non-Suicidal Adolescent Latinas
Zayas
Luis H.
author
Bright
Charlotte L.
author
Alvarez-Sanchez
Thyria
author
Cabassa
Leopoldo J.
author
Columbia University. Social Work
Columbia University. Social Work
originator
text
Articles
2009
manuscript version
English
We examined the role of acculturation, familism and Latina mother–daughter relations in suicide attempts by comparing 65 adolescents with recent suicide attempts and their mothers to 75 teens without any attempts and their mothers. Attempters and non-attempters were similar in acculturation and familistic attitudes but attempters report significantly less mutuality and communication with their mothers than non-attempters. Mothers of attempters reported lower mutuality and communication with their daughters than mothers of non-attempters. Small increments in mutuality decreased the probability of a suicide attempt by 57%. Acculturation and familism do not appear to play major roles in suicide attempts but relational factors may. Instituting school-based psychoeducational groups for young Latinas, particularly in middle school, and their parents, separately and jointly, and focusing on raising effective communication and mutuality between parents and adolescent daughters are important primary prevention strategies.
Mental health
Hispanic American studies
Journal of Primary Prevention
30
3-4
351
369
2009-07
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10935-009-0181-0
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:15250
NNC
NNC
2012-11-12 12:40:07 -0500
2012-11-12 16:20:35 -0500
9252
eng