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Bridging help-seeking options to Vietnamese Americans with parent–child conflict and depressive symptoms
Authors:Peter Viet Nguyen  Patrick Leung  Monit Cheung
Affiliation:aVirginia Commonwealth University, School of Social Work, 1001 West Franklin St., P.O. Box 842027, Richmond, VA 23284-2027, United States;bUniversity of Houston, Graduate College of Social Work, 110HA Social Work Building, Houston, TX 77204-4013, United States
Abstract:To help practitioners bridge services to their clients who face family problems, this research aims to identify help-seeking behaviors among Vietnamese Americans who have experienced parent–child conflict and depression. The 2008 Asian Survey found that 46.3% of 572 Vietnamese Americans experienced parent–child conflict and 30.2% reported depressive symptoms. Having parent–child conflicts or depressive symptoms did not predict help-seeking from mental health professionals. Logistic regression results show that having parent–child conflict would increase the likelihood by 81.7% of a thinking that the problem will be naturally resolved; having depressive symptoms would increase the likelihood of seeking help from herbalists by 1.718 times and from medical doctors by 39.7%. Service strategies should include offering educational programs by multidisciplinary professionals with a focus on the natural aspect of building parent–child bonding.
Keywords:Vietnamese refugees   Service utilization   Intergenerational cultural dissonance   Parenting styles   Natural healing
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