An Independent International Scientific Web Site to Promote Intellectual Values

Immigration and Mental Health

Immigration and Mental Health

Immigrants' voyages to a new land have been among the most exciting and noble of human endeavors. It is the amazing courage to flee oppression, to leave behind everything that is familiar, and to chance the hostility of a completely alien culture in order to find freedom, opportunity, and a better life. Immigrants are moving to a new country for the best of motives: the desire to improve their lives; the urge to leave countries whose governments they could not abide; and the willingness to work for another country where individuals can live in freedom and dignity. Many and many immigrants and refugees, including Albert Einstein, Ernst Boris Chain, Selman Abraham Waksman, Enrico Fermi, Sigmund Freud, Eric Fromm, Bertold Brecht, Jean Gabin, Charles de Gaulle, Thomas Mann, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, François-Marie Arouet (Voltaire), and Victor Hugo have made a remarkable contribution to the welfare and happiness of mankind.

Immigrants often face difficulty adjusting to their new home in a new country for many reasons, including coping with trauma experienced in their native country, overcoming cultural and language barriers, and encountering discrimination. This can lead to severe and long-lasting psychological and behavioral problems, including depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, and a high risk for suicide. The effects of immigration on psychological and social well-being are especially profound for certain populations, including children, women, individuals with disabilities, and those with limited financial resources. Many immigrants are often forced to take low-qualified jobs, even though they have the training and education for professional jobs. They cannot sustain their former economic and social status, which can lead to psychological distress. Despite the critical need for mental health services, immigrants face significant obstacles to receiving quality mental health care including financial difficulties, the lack of culturally- and linguistically-appropriate services, and mistrust of mental health providers.

The results of the most recent research studies related to immigration and mental health will be presented in the book, "Immigration and Mental Health: Stress, Psychiatric Disorders and Suicidal Behavior Among Immigrants and Refugees". This book will be of interest to physicians, psychologists, mental health counselors, sociologists, politicians, social workers, public health administrators, medical, psychology and sociology students, and lay people.

Publisher: Nova Science Publishers

Editors: Leo Sher and Alexander Vilens

Chapter abstracts:
1 A Model of Suicidal Behavior among Immigrants with Psychiatric Disorders
2 Immigration and Suicide: An Overview
3 Immigrants and Suicidal Behavior: The Role of Gender
4 Suicidal Behavior among Hispanic Immigrants in the United States
5 Suicidality and Acculturation in Hispanic Adolescents
6 Suicide amongst Britain’s Immigrant population: data sources, analytical approaches, and main findings
7 The Effects of Immigration on the mental health of adolescents: Depression, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Substance abuse, Delinquent and suicidal behavior among immigrant youth
8 Acculturation and Mental Disorders among Immigrants
9 Immigration, Psychosocial Factors and Psychological Distress, with Focus on Perceived Control and Social Integration
10 Depression among Latinos in the United States
11 Acculturation, Acculturative Stress, and Depression among Haitians in the United States
12 Changes in the Psychological Well-Being of Immigrants: A Three-Year Longitudinal Study of Immigrant Adolescents Including the Pre-Migration Period
13 Mental Health Problems among Immigrants in Israel
14 Epidemiology of Mental Health Problems among Immigrants. Case of Korean Immigrants in Brazil
15 Successful Use of Mental Health Migration Models: The New Zealand Experience
16 Substance Use Disorder among Immigrants in the United States
17 Alcohol Drinking and Treatment among Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union (FSU) in Israel: Review of Recent Publications January 2007-June 2009
18 The Motives for Migration
19 The Social and Cultural Context of Immigration and Stress
20 Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: Integration of Biological and Psychosocial Aspects
21 Impulsivity: A New Concept for an Old Idea
22 Not Just another Pretty Face: The Cross-Cultural Perception and Social Ramifications of Facial Attractiveness