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The Conceptualization of Anxiety: An Exploratory Study of Japanese American Older Adults
Authors:Kristen M. Hilliard  Gayle Y. Iwamasa
Affiliation:(1) Oklahoma State University, 215 North Murray, Stillwater, Oklahoma, 74075;(2) University of Indianapolis, 1400 E. Hanna Avenue, Indianapolis, IN, 46227
Abstract:Few empirical studies exist on the mental health of Japanese American older adults. This study focused on how Japanese American older adults conceptualize anxiety. Participants were presented with a checklist, which included anxiety and depression symptoms identified in a previous qualitative study conducted by the authors, as well as symptoms from Generalized Anxiety Disorder in the Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IVrpar;. They were asked to imagine a Japanese American older adult who was experiencing anxiety and check off the symptoms he/she would be experiencing. Results indicated that these Japanese American participants conceptualized anxiety by using more depressive symptoms than anxiety symptoms. In addition, contrary to previous research and speculation about how Asian Americans experience psychological distress, participants also checked a larger number of cognitive symptoms as opposed to somatic symptoms. The present data suggest that Japanese American older adults conceptualize anxiety differently from the traditional psychiatric conceptualization of anxiety. Thus, clinicians and researchers should not generalize symptoms of psychological distress developed and researched on nonminority older adults to ethnic minority adults, and should consider such ethnic group differences in their assessment and treatment methods for ethnic minority adults.
Keywords:Japanese Americans  conceptualization  anxiety  assessment
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