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Intersecting sexuality, gender, race

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Intersecting sexuality, gender, race & citizenship: Mental Health issues faced ... affiliated with primary care, hospice care, and ethnospecific community ASOs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intersecting sexuality, gender, race


1
Intersecting sexuality, gender, race
citizenship Mental Health issues faced by
immigrants and refugees living with HIV/AIDS
  • Presented by Josephine P. Wong, RN, PhD (c)
  • Toronto Public Health,
  • Planning Policy Urban Issues
  • With CAAT Research Team

2
Committee for Accessible AIDS Treatment (CAAT)
Research Team
  • Josephine P. Wong, PhD (c)
  • Dr. Alan Li
  • Y. B. Chen, MSW
  • Pushpa Kanagaratnam, PhD (c)
  • Susanda Yee, MA
  • Dr. Kenneth Fung
  • Anuradha Roy Sen, PhD

3
A Preliminary Study onMigration, HIV/AIDS
Mental HealthWhat are the issues?
MIGRATION
HIV/AIDS
MENTAL HEALTH
PHYSICAL SPIRITUAL HEALTH
4
Purpose of Study
  • The purpose of this study was to gain a
    preliminary understanding of
  • The mental health issues faced by immigrants,
    refugees and non-status persons living with
    HIV/AIDS (IR-PHAs) in the Greater Toronto Area
  • Their experiences in accessing services related
    to mental health
  • Research priorities based on their identified
    needs

5
Method
  • Literature Search
  • A brief program scan
  • 2 Focus Groups
  • 10 PHAs from the 5 ethnospecific communities
    served by CAAT
  • 10 service providers affiliated with primary
    care, hospice care, and ethnospecific community
    ASOs

6
Framework of Analysis What determines our health?
  • Social Environmental
  • Income
  • Housing
  • Food/nutrition
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Healthy child development
  • Social inclusion
  • Access to services
  • Physical environment
  • Social environment
  • etc.
  • Individual
  • Biological
  • Genetic factors
  • Lifestyle
  • Personal Practices

Our Health
7
Key finding 1 Literature review -- knowledge
gaps
  • Majority of HIV/AIDS research in N. American
    focus on gay white males.
  • Research subpopulations are mostly defined by
    race or ethnicity categories and not citizenship
    or migration status
  • Studies of PHAs with multiple marginalities are
    virtually non-existent.
  • There is a lack of inclusive research in which
    the meanings of mental health, sexuality
    HIV/AIDS are studied within the social contexts
    of the marginalized groups.

8
Key finding 2 Mental health services for
IR-PHA are uncoordinated or inaccessible
  • A request for mental health assessment and
    counselling for a non-English speaking female
    immigrant PHA led to 7 redirections and
    subsequently the request was referred back to a
    community AIDS service organization
  • There is a lack of access to culturally
    linguistically appropriate counseling service
    beyond HIV testing counselling.
  • IR-PHAs are sometimes retraumatized by
    fragmented and uncoordinated services or abuse of
    power by some service providers.

9
Physical Psychosocial Connections
  • Bodys response to HIV HIV treatment
  • Visible invisible impairment
  • altered functioning

spirit
body
mind
  • stigma
  • social exclusion
  • isolation
  • alienation
  • stress
  • altered sense of self
  • depression

10
Physical mental Wellnessare intertwined
  • I have memory loss, its like the brain is not
    working now I cannot even remember my childrens
    birthday.
  • After immigration, you cannot find work you
    need to upgrade your education, but how can you
    do that when your head is not working as well as
    before?

11
Physical mental wellness are affectedby social
reactions interactions
  • It happened to me. It visual impairment has
    created a loss of independence for me I am now
    scared of going to places unless I am really
    familiar with them I need to rely on others but
    I dont want to have to explain my condition all
    the time
  • One late evening, I was going down to the club to
    meet some friends. The guard saw me from afar
    and thought I was drunk and refused to let me in
    I have to show my sight impairment ID
    Regular incidents like this will lead to stress
    and isolation. When you stay home all the time
    with the four walls, sooner or later, your
    thinking will become negative

12
Social, economic political connections
spirit
body
  • Access to basic
  • Determinants
  • housing
  • employment
  • health care
  • income, etc.

Citizenship status
Social inclusion
13
For refugee non-status PHAs, the immigration
processes were the major source of stress
  • When you have HIV, you feel that people wouldnt
    date you but dating is the last thing you worry
    about the immigration status comes first I
    cannot think about HIV treatment or anything else
    until I get my immigration papers

14
Other stressors are related to stigma
discrimination
  • People have stereotypes about refugees they
    think they are uneducated, ignorant and only want
    to take advantage of the system.
  • Being an immigrant, you dont want to be on
    social assistance, but you cannot find work
    because your home qualification is not being
    recognized. Once you are HIV positive, the
    government labels you as disabled and says that
    you can get disability benefits so that makes
    you feel you are disabled and that impacts on
    your mental health.

15
IR-PHAs experience a sense of deep loss
uncertainty about their life in Canada.
  • HIV is a big problem in Africa and Asia having
    a landed immigrant status is a relief. Once
    youve arrived in Canada, you know there are
    medication and treatment. You can try to close
    the chapter of persecution at home country.
    But you now have a different kind of mental
    distress and needs.
  • We live longer but what kind of life are we
    living?
  • Housing is a big stress when you cannot find
    housing, what do you do? Do you go back to the
    shelter?

16
Research priorities identifiedby participants
  • What types of mental health services are
    available to IR-PHAs?
  • What needs to be in place to increase
    accessibility and utilization?
  • How to facilitate a better coordination of
    existing services?
  • What do service providers know about the
    intersection of HIV/AIDS, mental health
    migration?

17
The 4 Ps contributing to the Mental Health of
IR-PHAs
environmental
Predisposing Factors
Precipitating Factors
war
biological
migration
trauma
genetical/ congenital
HIV diagnosis
Mental Health
loss
PHYSICAL SPIRITUAL HEALTH
Perpetuating Factors
Protective Factors
access to adequate income housing, employment,
etc.
stress
decreased health status
coping ability
personal strengths
social exclusion
social inclusion
community support
inadequate income inadequate housing
access to HIV care
altered sense of self
social spiritual support
unemployment
Etc.
Etc.
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