Publication | Closed Access
Spirituality and Treatment Choices by South and East Asian Women with Serious Mental Illness
37
Citations
32
References
2005
Year
PsychotherapyEast Asian StudiesReligiosityMental Health InterventionMental HealthEast Asian WomenMedical AnthropologyLanguage StudiesPsychiatryTreatment ChoicesPsychosocial IssueMindfulnessCommunity Mental HealthSerious Mental IllnessCross-cultural PerspectiveSpiritualityCultural PsychiatrySpiritual ChoiceMedicinePsychopathologyCultural Beliefs
The purpose of this qualitative study is to investigate how South and East Asian immigrant women who have diagnoses of serious mental illness make treatment choices in relation to spirituality and to explore how gender, cultural beliefs, and spirituality intersect with the process of choice. The findings reveal that the process of spiritual choice includes three interrelated phases: (1) identifying contributing factors, (2) exploring spiritual resources and strategies, and (3) living with the choices. Variations among health beliefs and health care decisions are explained and services that women see as being helpful are identified.
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