A CBPR approach can make the process of collecting public health and health services data in hard-to-reach communities not only viable, but also highly successful.
The authors report on 404 Southeast Asian refugees seen at a community clinic. Approximately three-quarters of these patients met DSM-III criteria for major depressive episode, and 14% had posttraumatic stress disorder. Complaints of pain and sleep disturbances were the predominant presenting symptoms. Most of the men were married, but more than 40% of the women were widowed. Between 15% and 30% of the patients reported specific traumatic experiences either in their homeland or during their escape. Widowhood and such traumatic experiences were positively correlated with more symptoms of depression and anxiety.
This study underscores the need for researchers to disaggregate data for ethnic subgroups in the Asian American population. Southeast Asian elders are at increased risk for depression and have low social connectedness. There exist important interethnic differences in resilience factors for geriatric depression, suggesting the need for more studies and interventions that are sensitive to subtle cultural differences among Southeast Asian subgroups.
Southeast (SE) Asians suffer from health disparities often caused by lack of preventive care, exacerbated by linguistic barriers which exclude many from surveys that fail to include minorities. This survey of linguistically-challenged SE Asians captured health status indicators, behaviors and access. Items were based upon Public Health Management Corporation's Household Health Survey. Participants were recruited by a community-based organization serving SE Asians; interviews were conducted in nine languages. Data were weighted to match age-sex distributions of Asians in Philadelphia. Of 527 interviews completed, 57% were U.S. citizens, 48% uninsured, 23% had gone without care due to cost. English was the main language at home for 3%, yet 53% reported their primary health care site did not have an interpreter. Nearly half reported health as fair/poor, and 22% had a chronic health condition. This community survey illuminates the need to profile the health care needs of these immigrant populations.
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