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Mental health service use by individuals of South Asian origin living outside of South Asia is influenced by cultural factors such as endorsing psycho-social-spiritual over biological explanations, somatisation, and stigma. The aim of this review is to synthesise the evidence about (a) explanatory models of common mental disorders (CMDs) among people of South Asian origin residing in high-income countries, and (b) their help-seeking for CMDs, including formal and informal care. The systematic review protocol was registered a priori on Prospero (registration number CRD42021287583). We ran extensive searches on explanatory models and help-seeking of people of South Asian origin across five databases (MEDLINE, Embase, Cumulated Index to Nursing and Allied Health (CINAHL), PsycINFO, and Global Health). We extracted the data and conducted a narrative synthesis. We included 33 reports and 29 studies (9,030 participants). The participants in the included studies viewed CMDs through a psychosocial rather than a biological lens (e.g., resulting from family issues vs. neurotransmitters). Causal attributions included life stressors and attitudinal and religious/spiritual factors. Commonly used help-seeking strategies included private coping (i.e., crying or praying), speaking to friends and family, and visiting their General Practitioner. We can conclude that cultural factors play an important role in how South Asian individuals experience and understand CMDs. To cope, they use pluralistic help-seeking strategies. Implications for clinical practice and policy include increasing research on the explanatory models of CMDs, involving family in services, and developing community-based interventions for individuals who do not engage with formal care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13634615241296302 | DOI Listing |
Acta Psychol (Amst)
September 2025
School of Physical Education, Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong 250061, China. Electronic address:
Introduction: This study explores how destination image shapes international tourists' satisfaction and loyalty in a heritage tourism setting, focusing on Mount Taishan as a case study. It investigates direct and indirect pathways, including mediating roles and demographic controls.
Methods: One thousand eight hundred international tourists were initially surveyed at Mount Taishan during the 2023 peak season, with 1650 valid responses retained after data cleaning.
Nurse Educ Pract
August 2025
Faculty of Nursing, Universidad de Cantabria, IDIVAL Nursing Research Group, Avda. Valdecilla s/n., Santander 39008, Spain.
Background: Gender inequalities in care of women with cardiopulmonary arrest may be due to lack of training with manikins representing the female thorax. Incorporating this feature in basic life support (BLS) training would support a more equitable and effective response.
Aim: To evaluate the impact of using female torso mannikins in BLS training for nursing students.
JMIR Form Res
September 2025
Department of Psychiatry, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, MA, United States.
Background: Measurement-based care (MBC), including remote MBC, is increasingly being considered or implemented for mental health treatment and outcomes monitoring in routine clinical care. However, little is known about the health equity implications in real-world practice or the impact on patient-provider relationships in lower-resource systems that offer mental health treatment for diverse patients.
Objective: This hypothesis-generating study examined the drivers of MBC implementation outcomes, the implications for health equity, and the impact of MBC on therapeutic alliance (TA).
Psychophysiology
September 2025
Biological Psychology and Neuroergonomics, Technical University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
We designed an object interception task using virtual reality and mobile brain/body imaging to test two core hypotheses of ecological psychology and radical embodied cognitive (neuro)science: the ecological resonance hypothesis and the information-based control laws hypothesis. These two hypotheses define an alternative explanatory strategy that aims to understand the organization and control of behavior without appealing to internal models or representations of any kind. The ecological resonance hypothesis was evaluated in relation to the ecological variable known as tau (τ) or time-to-contact (TTC).
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September 2025
Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering Technology and Science, Porto, Porto District, 4200-465, Portugal.
Digital transformation has been one of the main trends in organizations in recent years, and digital literacy is a critical factor in the success of this transformation. Digital transformation involves the use of digital technologies to improve an organization's processes, products, and services. For this transformation to be successful, it is necessary for employees to have knowledge of and skills in digital technologies.
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