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Migration and Schizophrenia. Migrant: Someone who changes their place of residence for any purpose or for any period of time Legal classification Characteristics of migration Motivation of migration . Migration and Schizophrenia. ACROSS COUNTRIES IN COUNRTRY (RURAL ? URBAN; URBAN ?). Migratio
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1. Cultural Congruity, Cultural Identity and Migration Professor Dinesh Bhugra
Professor of Mental Health and Cultural Diversity
Section of Cultural Psychiatry
Institute of Psychiatry
Kings College London
2. Migration and Schizophrenia Migrant: Someone who changes their place of residence for any purpose or for any period of time
Legal classification
Characteristics of migration
Motivation of migration
3. Migration and Schizophrenia
ACROSS COUNTRIES
IN COUNRTRY
(RURAL ? URBAN; URBAN ?)
4. Migration and Schizophrenia OCCUPATIONAL MIGRATION
Anthropology
Diplomacy
Higher Education
Journalism
Military Service
Missionaries
Sales People
Seasonal Migratory Work
5. Migration and Schizophrenia DEMOGRAPHICS OF MIGRANTS
Age
Gender
Primary
Education
Voluntariness
Duration
6. Migration and Schizophrenia MIGRATION REASONS
Political - Exiles
- Refugees
Economic - Single
- Business Transient
- Permanent
- Group
Social - Students
- Stars
7. UK African Caribbean Immigrants and UK Natives Incidence Rates per 1000 for Schizophrenia
9. Cochrane and Bal (1987) Rates of admission for schizophrenia in the UK are
higher for the Irish, Indian Pakistani, and
Caribbean born, compared to the native. In general
the foreign born have rates of admission (except
for Pakistani women) which are higher.
Pakistani women are said to drop out of formal
mental health system.
11. Additional Hypotheses
Ethnic Density
Concepts of Self
Achievement – Aspiration
Cultural Congruity
13. Identity
Totality of one’s self-construal in which how one construes one’s self in the present expresses the continuity between how one construes oneself as one was in the past and how one construes oneself as one aspires to be in the future
15. Identities: studied by using Knowledge of collective behaviours
Child-rearing systems
Collective adult phenomena, eg political behaviours
Institutional practices
Religious Ideas Systems
16.
Individualism: Refers to society where the ties between individuals are loose and everyone is expected to look after himself/herself and their immediate family
Collectivism: People from birth onwards are integrated into strong cohesive in groups which throughout their lifetime continue to protect them in exchange for unquestioning loyalty
17.
Individualism: I-ness. I consciousness, autonomy, emotional independence, individual initiative right to privacy, pleasure seeking, financial security, need for specific friendship
Collectivism: We-ness. We consciousness, collective identity, emotional interdependence, group solidarity, sharing duties and obligations, need for stable and predetermined friendships, group decisions
Hofstede 1980, 1984
18. Individualism: Liberalism Rational individuals/personal choices
Discreet, autonomous, self-sufficient and respectful to the rights of others
Abstract, universal, role confined by achievement
Equality, equity, non-interference and detachability
19. Collectivism: Traditionalism Common good/social harmony
Individuals bound by relationships
Others put first before themselves
Concession/compromise
Justice and institutions are seen as an extension of the family
Paternalism and legal moralism
I am kind. I think…us. My family expect me to be kind
20. Collectivism as Concern Consideration of implications of one’s own
decisions
Sharing of material resources
Sharing of nonmaterial resources
Susceptibility to social influences
Self-presentation and face work
Sharing of outcomes
Feeling of involvement in others’ lives
21. Individualism: Related to high levels of GNP
High levels of crime, suicide, divorce, child abuse, emotional stress and physical and mental illness
Having substantial levels of migration, most social, and geographical mobility
29. Model of Vulnerability
Individual
Biopsychological
Vulnerability