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      Predictors of positive mental health among refugees: Results from Canada’s General Social Survey

      1 , 2
      Transcultural Psychiatry
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          Do refugees have lower levels of positive mental health than other migrants? If so, to what extent is this attributable to post-migration experiences, including discrimination? How does gender affect the relationships between post-migration experience and positive mental health? To address these questions, the current study uses data from Statistics Canada’s 2013 General Social Survey (GSS), a nationally representative household study that included 27,695 Canadians 15 years of age and older. The study compares self-reported positive mental health among 651 refugees, 309 economic immigrants, and 448 family class immigrants from 50 source countries. Immigration-related predictors of mental health were examined including sociodemographic characteristics, discrimination, acculturation variables, and experiences of reception. Separate analyses were carried out for women and men. Refugees had lower levels of positive mental health than other migrants. Affiliative feelings towards the source country jeopardized refugee, but not immigrant mental health. A sense of belonging to Canada was a significant predictor of mental health. Perceived discrimination explained refugee mental health disadvantage among men, but not women. Bridging social networks were a mental health asset, particularly for women. The implications of anti-refugee discrimination net of the effects of anti-immigrant and anti-visible minority antipathies are discussed, as well as possible reasons for gender differences in the salience of mental health predictors.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Transcultural Psychiatry
          Transcult Psychiatry
          SAGE Publications
          1363-4615
          1461-7471
          December 2017
          August 31 2017
          December 2017
          : 54
          : 5-6
          : 675-695
          Affiliations
          [1 ]St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto
          [2 ]University of Western Ontario
          Article
          10.1177/1363461517724985
          28854860
          7fbde6ce-0d4d-4f84-b479-2b66bcc2f728
          © 2017

          http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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