1. Mental health problems of adolescents as reported by their caregivers: a comparison of European, African, and Latino Americans.
- Author
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Roberts RE, Alegría M, Roberts CR, and Chen IG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Black People statistics & numerical data, Caregivers psychology, Child, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders psychology, Parents psychology, Prospective Studies, Utilization Review statistics & numerical data, White People statistics & numerical data, Black People psychology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Health Maintenance Organizations statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders ethnology, Personality Assessment, White People psychology
- Abstract
This article examines problem recognition across ethnic groups by focusing on parental reports of mental health problems in adolescents. Data were collected from 1 youth (aged 11-17) and 1 caregiver from a community-based sample of households in the Houston metropolitan area. The sample was 4175 youths and their caregivers (37.8% European, 35.00% African, 25.4% Latino, and 1.8% other American). Indicators of mental health were perceived mental health, life dissatisfaction, and whether adolescents had a mental health problem in the past year. European Americans were more likely to rate the mental health of adolescents as fair or poor, were about twice as likely to report that adolescents were dissatisfied with their lives, and that adolescents had a mental health problem in the past year. Interventions to help minority families in the identification of youth's mental health problems may need to address cultural differences in the definition of mental health problems or in the benefit of labeling mental health problems that may serve as barriers to help-seeking.
- Published
- 2005