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Intergenerational communication regarding Indian residential schools : implications for cultural identity, perceived discrimination, and depressive symptoms
University of British Columbia Library

04/2020
Document > Journal Article
Creators
Matheson, Kimberly; Bombay, Amy; Dixon, Kaylyn; Anisman, Hymie
Description
"Two studies assessed the nature of parental communication about the trauma of Indian Residential Schools (IRSs) in relation to the psychological distress of their adult offspring, and whether the link between parental communication and distress was mediated by offsprings' greater awareness of collective discrimination or sense of pride in cultural identity. In Study 1, an online survey of Indigenous participants from across Canada (  = 498) demonstrated a curvilinear relation between the extent to which parents talked about their negative IRS experiences and the severity of depressive symptoms among offspring, among whom symptoms were particularly pronounced with more frequent communication. This relation was mediated by greater perceived discrimination. A similar, but inverse, association was found when parental communications conveyed positive construals of their IRS experiences. Study 2 (  = 134) further demonstrated an association between direct communications from IRS survivors and offspring wellbeing in that, either the absence of, or especially frequent communications were related to more severe depressive symptoms among offspring. However, hearing about parental IRS experiences from someone other than the parent was not related to offsprings' depressive symptoms. Qualitative analyses indicated that direct communications from parents tended to provide excessive detail, whereas parental silence was associated with speculation and feelings of isolation or resentment among offspring of IRS survivors. Taken together, the results suggest that either insufficient or excessive parental communication about trauma might undermine offspring wellbeing, whereas moderate levels of communication that provide positive meaning and promote cultural pride or diminish perceptions of personal discrimination could be beneficial"--abstract.
Language
English

More Information

Statement of Responsibility
Kimberly Matheson, Amy Bombay, Kaylyn Dixon, Hymie Anisman.
Publication Information
SAGE Publications
Physical Description
1 online resource (17 pages)
Notes
Contained in: Transcultural Psychiatry. Volume 57, number 2 (April 2020), p. 304-320.
Citation (APA Style): Matheson, K., Bombay, A., Dixon, K., & Anisman, H. (2020). Intergenerational communication regarding indian residential schools: Implications for cultural identity, perceived discrimination, and depressive symptoms. Transcultural Psychiatry, 57(2), 304-320. https://doi.org/10.1177/1363461519832240.
Includes bibliographical references.
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