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Acculturation, enculturation, and Asian American college students' mental health and attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help
Authors:Miller Matthew J  Yang Minji  Hui Kayi  Choi Na-Yeun  Lim Robert H
Affiliation:Department of Counseling and Personnel Services, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA. mmille27@umd.edu
Abstract:In the present study, we tested a theoretically and empirically derived partially indirect effects acculturation and enculturation model of Asian American college students' mental health and attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help. Latent variable path analysis with 296 self-identified Asian American college students supported the partially indirect effects model and demonstrated the ways in which behavioral acculturation, behavioral enculturation, values acculturation, values enculturation, and acculturation gap family conflict related to mental health and attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help directly and indirectly through acculturative stress. We also tested a generational status moderator hypothesis to determine whether differences in model-implied relationships emerged across U.S.- (n = 185) and foreign-born (n = 107) participants. Consistent with this hypothesis, statistically significant differences in structural coefficients emerged across generational status. Limitations, future directions for research, and counseling implications are discussed.
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