Mental health literacy may be a roadblock for Vietnamese Americans seeking help, study shows
When Vi Pham was growing up in Orange Countyâs Little Saigon, she noticed there was no way to say âmental healthâ in Vietnamese.
âWhen we say âmental health,â itâs usually associated with the word âcrazyâ and we think of mental institutions,â said Pham, now a masterâs student in counseling at Cal State Fullerton. âThatâs why when people hear âmental healthâ in my culture, they get scared. They think of it as something incurable, that the person is not normal.â
As a result, many older Vietnamese Americans â who decades later may continue to suffer from trauma related to the Vietnam War â donât seek out mental health services, she said.
âIf I have an issue, I have to deal with it myself or it has to be solved within the family,â Pham said. âSeeking outside help is not an option. If someone outside knows about our family issues, the family fears theyâll be looked down upon.â
According to a 2008 study from the UC Irvine Center for Health Care Policy, 21% of Vietnamese Americans report depression and anxiety, compared with 10% of whites. Meanwhile, only 20% of Vietnamese Americans have discussed mental health with a professional, compared with 45% of whites.
While this stigma has been the subject of extensive academic study, a new project out of Cal State Fullerton is investigating another reason Vietnamese Americans donât seek help as much as others â mental health literacy. Pham is a research assistant for the project.
âThe community doesnât know what mental health is,â said Yuying Tsong, assistant professor at Cal State Fullerton and lead researcher on the study. âAnd if you donât know what mental health is, why would you seek help, even if youâre showing symptoms of depression?â
The community doesnât know what mental health is ... And if you donât know what mental health is, why would you seek help, even if youâre showing symptoms of depression?
— Yuying Tsong, assistant professor at Cal State Fullerton
Tsongâs research, which is supported by a grant from UCLA, investigates this concept of mental health literacy through a series of in-depth interviews with older Vietnamese adults in Orange County.
To evaluate them, she reads a short story â in Vietnamese â describing another personâs depression symptoms, like withdrawal from social activities, then assesses whether the interviewee can identify them.
âFor example, weâll tell them that this grandpa used to like gardening a lot, and he used to socialize and play Chinese chess with his friends in the park,â Tsong said. âBut in the last two weeks, he hasnât gone out. His friends call him, and he says, âIâm too tired.â Even when his grandchildren call, he says, âI donât want to go out.â
âThen we ask the interviewee what he thinks happened and what this person should do.â
Tsongâs research doesnât focus exclusively on Vietnamese war refugees â her interview subjects were screened by age, not life experience â but Orange County is home to the largest Vietnamese American population in the United States, having developed as people fled Vietnam as a result of the war.
Before premanently resettling in areas such as Garden Grove and Westminster, many refugees had first been taken to reception camps in the Philippines and Guam, and later to temporary housing at U.S. Army bases in the United States, including Camp Pendleton, in San Diego County. Over the course of this journey, many died, families were separated and wealth was lost. Survivors then faced the challenge of starting all over in a new country and learning a new language and culture.
This history is one reason why rates of mental health issues such as post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and anxiety are higher among Vietnamese Americans than other Asians, such as Indians, who typically emigrated for professional reasons, not because of war, Tsong said.
This disparity canât help but serve as a backdrop to Tsongâs research.
Although Tsong hasnât completed her interviews yet â sheâs done 24 out of about 30 she has planned â she sees clear patterns in the results.
âThe recognition of depression symptoms are fairly low,â she said. âA lot of times they believe that if the person were to just go out in their social life more, visit family more or exercise more, theyâll be better. This explains why our community is not seeking help. If you donât recognize that these behaviors are really about depression, youâre not going to seek the appropriate professionals.â
Another trend is attributing depression symptoms to old age.
âAging doesnât mean you have to be depressed,â Tsong said. âBut if older adults see aging as being old and sad, of course theyâre not going to get treatment.â
Thanh Do, program director for behavioral health at the Nhan Hoa Comprehensive Healthcare Clinic in Garden Grove, agrees that lack of knowledge about mental health is one of the primary barriers for treatment in the local Vietnamese American community.
One common misperception, he explained, is the âmorality viewâ of mental health, that mental health is a reflection of a personâs character.
âThey think that if they have a mental health problem, it means their family is not so good,â he said. âThatâs why we try to explain it to them in the medical view, that mental health problems are the same as other medical problems.â
Another barrier to treatment is language.
About 90% of Vietnamese American seniors in Orange County have limited English proficiency, according to Tsong, and 40% of local Vietnamese American households are linguistically isolated, meaning that every family member over the age of 14 has limited English proficiency.
âEven if they can recognize that a person may be depressed, itâs going to be difficult for them to find a mental health professional who will be able to deliver services in the language thatâs appropriate for them,â Tsong said.
But over the course of his 20-year career in mental health services, Do said heâs seen a noticeable change in Vietnamese Americansâ willingness â and ability â to get help.
Mainstream services now have more Vietnamese language speakers, and clinics such as Nhan Hoa that cater specifically to the Vietnamese community have emerged throughout the county. Other groups include Viet-Care and the Orange County Assn. for Vietnamese Mental Health Awareness and Support.
In addition, Do said, mental health is being discussed more frequently on television and radio, which has led to a greater awareness and desire to seek help, and an increasing number of younger Vietnamese Americans are entering the fields of social work, psychology and counseling with the specific goal of serving their own community.
âThe more people learn about mental illness,â he said, âthe more theyâll get treatment.â
Tsong hopes that her research will also lead to change.
Using her results, Tsong will design a pilot intervention program aimed at improving the mental health literacy of older Vietnamese American adults, something that will have implications for the entire community, she said.
If the older generation understands mental health, she explained, theyâll also be more supportive when the younger generation seeks help.
âIf we could increase the mental health literacy of older adults, we can increase the entire familyâs views about mental health,â Tsong said.
Research assistant Pham agreed.
âIf our older generation keeps telling the younger generation that thereâs stigma, donât go to counseling, itâs useless. Of course young people are going to look at it like itâs not necessary,â she said. âBut if older people are doing it, then it shows people of all ages that they can benefit.â
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Caitlin Yoshiko Kandil, [email protected]