Changing time perspective and mental health among Southeast Asian refugees
- 1 December 1987
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Springer Nature in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
- Vol. 11 (4) , 437-464
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00048493
Abstract
Little is known about the psychological mechanisms people employ in adapting to extreme circumstances such as becoming refugees. Case studies of refugees making up part of a sample of 1348 persons relocated from Southeast Asia to Vancouver, British Columbia, suggest that altering one's perception of time may be an adaptive strategy. During periods of acute stress, refugees seem to focus on the present to the relative exclusion of past and future. The reemergence of past and future into consciousness brings about a risk for developing depression. Epidemiological data corroborate inferences from case material, demonstrating that refugees are more present-oriented than the indigenous population. A “Nostalgic” time orientation, preoccupation with the past, is associated with elevated depression scores. Contrasts are drawn between nostalgia, a maladaptive pattern, and memory, which is an inevitable part of the process of personality integration.This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
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