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. 2002 Feb;92(2):220-7.
doi: 10.2105/ajph.92.2.220.

Poverty, family process, and the mental health of immigrant children in Canada

Affiliations

Poverty, family process, and the mental health of immigrant children in Canada

Morton Beiser et al. Am J Public Health. 2002 Feb.

Abstract

Objectives: This study examined the differential effects of poverty on the mental health of foreign-born children, Canadian-born children of immigrant parents, and children of non-immigrant parents.

Methods: Secondary analysis of data from a national Canadian study of children between 4 and 11 years of age was conducted.

Results: Compared with their receiving-society counterparts, foreign-born children were more than twice as likely to live in poor families, but they had lower levels of emotional and behavioral problems. The effect of poverty on children's mental health among long-term immigrant and receiving-society families was indirect and primarily mediated by single-parent status, ineffective parenting, parental depression, and family dysfunction. In comparison, the mental health effect of poverty among foreign-born children could not be explained by the disadvantages that poor families often suffer.

Conclusions: Poverty may represent a transient and inevitable part of the resettlement process for new immigrant families. For long-stay immigrant and receiving-society families, however, poverty probably is not part of an unfolding process; instead, it is the nadir of a cycle of disadvantage.

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Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
—Mediational pathways through which poverty affects children's emotional problems.
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 2
—Mediational pathways through which poverty affects children's behavioral problems.

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