4 results on '"Cisco, Mia"'
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2. The Immigration‐Related Political Ideology Scale: Development, factor structure, and validity evidence.
- Author
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Schwartz, Seth J., Duque, Maria, Sahbaz, Sumeyra, Gladfelter, Carolina Scaramutti, Cisco, Mia, Nehme‐Kotocavage, Lea, Vo, Duyen H., Alpysbekova, Aigerim, Montero‐Zamora, Pablo, Ertanir, Beyhan, Coninck, David De, Bogado, Natalia, and Schildkraut, Deborah J.
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EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *POLITICAL affiliation , *POLITICAL doctrines , *FACTOR analysis - Abstract
Public Significance Statement The aim of the present study was to develop and validate the Immigration‐Related Political Ideology Scale (IRPIS), designed to measure diverse political perspectives on immigration among US voters. The IRPIS was developed following a series of focus groups and refined through a systematic item‐generation process involving expert panels. The scale was validated using a two‐step factor analysis with a nationally representative sample of 1292 US voters, divided into exploratory (
n = 632) and confirmatory (n = 660) sub‐samples. The exploratory factor analysis identified seven distinct factors: conservative views, welcoming attitudes, world regions, flexibility, assimilationist expectations, multicultural expectations, and undocumented immigrant rights. Confirmatory factor analysis provided an acceptable fit (CFI = .901; RMSEA = .050), and the scale demonstrated high internal consistency (Cronbach's alphas ranging from .89 to .97). Inter‐factor correlations varied, with strong links observed among welcoming attitudes, flexibility, and multicultural expectations (r ’s > .80), confirming a polarization between liberal and conservative stances on immigration. These findings suggest that the IRPIS is the first scale specifically designed to assess immigration‐related political orientations in a polarized US context. This tool has important implications for political strategy and policymaking, especially in the context of rising immigration rates and political polarization.The present study validates the Immigration‐Related Political Ideology Scale (IRPIS) using a nationally representative sample of 1292 US voters. Immigration remains a highly polarizing issue, with deeply entrenched ideological differences influencing policy preferences and public discourse. Exploratory factor analysis identified seven distinct factors and confirmed a clear polarization between liberal and conservative views on immigration. The IRPIS represents a critical tool for research, political strategy, and policymaking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. Cultural-economic stress and mental health among Ukrainian immigrants residing in the U.S. post-Russian invasion.
- Author
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Alpysbekova A, Cisco MM, Ertanir B, Vo DH, Scaramutti C, Nehme L, Montero-Zamora P, Bautista T, and Schwartz SJ
- Abstract
The present study investigates the perceived impact of cultural and family-economic stressors on the mental health and well-being of Ukrainian migrants in the United States who arrived either pre- or post-Russian invasion. We used a range of tools for assessment, including the general anxiety disorder (GAD-7), CESD-B-10, Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ-22), posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD-17), 10-item Revised Life Orientation Test, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test, seven-item Perceived Discrimination Scale, six-item Perceived Context of Reception Scale, Language Stress-7, family-economic stress-13 (FES-13), Survivor's guilt-9, and Satisfaction with Life-5 scales. Utilizing latent profile analysis with a sample of 703 Ukrainian migrants, we identified three distinct classes based on levels of cultural and family-economic stress: low, moderate, and high stress. We found that the high-stress class reported the highest levels of depressive ( M = 27.29, SD = 6.02), anxiety ( M = 12.11, SD = 4.30), and PTSD symptoms ( M = 42.19, SD = 11.01), along with lower life satisfaction ( M = 10.76, SD = 4.99) and higher rates of Survivor's guilt ( M = 23.07, SD = 7.57), trauma ( M = 16.76, SD = 5.51), and alcohol misuse ( M = 14.57, SD = 10.84). Conversely, the low-stress class reported higher levels of optimism ( M = 22.14, SD = 5.01). Importantly, individuals arriving after the invasion were disproportionately represented in the high-stress class, with a significant majority meeting criteria for probable anxiety, depression, and PTSD diagnoses. Furthermore, a substantial portion of high-stress participants met criteria for alcohol dependence, emphasizing the pivotal role of stressors in influencing the mental health of Ukrainian migrants, and suggesting the need for tailored interventions addressing cultural and family-economic stressors. This study enhances our understanding of cultural and family-economic stress theories within a European migrant context, emphasizing the significance of arrival cohort and stress levels in mental health interventions for migrant populations. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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4. The effect of the Russian invasion on mental, social, and behavioral health among Ukrainians living in the United States.
- Author
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Alpysbekova A, Cisco MM, Vo DH, Ertanir B, Sahbaz S, Montero-Zamora P, Bautista T, Scaramutti C, Bartoszak M, Nehme L, Duque M, and Schwartz SJ
- Abstract
Objective: The present research examines the disparities among Ukrainians residing in the United States, comparing Ukrainians who migrated before the February 2022 Russian invasion against those who arrived afterward. We compare these two cohorts vis-a-vis anxiety, depressive symptoms, optimism, posttraumatic stress, life satisfaction, family economic stress, cultural stress (discrimination, negative context of reception, and language stress), hazardous alcohol use, and domestic violence perpetration and victimization., Method: The present sample included 703 Ukrainians (53.63% women) residing in the United States. We conducted a series of multivariate analyses of variance using arrival cohort (pre- vs. postinvasion) and gender (male vs. female) as independent variables., Results: Results indicated that postinvasion participants reported greater internalizing symptoms, cultural/economic stress, and hazardous alcohol use, whereas preinvasion arrivals reported greater levels of optimism and life satisfaction. No significant interactions between cohort and gender emerged for any of the outcomes., Conclusion: Our findings offer valuable insights into the mental health and well-being of displaced Ukrainians within the backdrop of ongoing conflicts. These findings have significant implications for support and intervention efforts not only for Ukrainians but also for other crisis migrant groups. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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